T W E N T I E T H - C E N T U R Y
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T W E N T I E T H - C E N T U R Y
Praise for T w e n t i e t h - C e n t u r y
C A T H O L I C
Catholic Theologians " W i t h characteristic l u c i d i t y and insight, Fergus K e r r narrates the story o f t w e n t i e t h - c e n t u r y Catholic theology This i l l u m i n a t i n g and c o m p e l l i n g
T H E O L O G I A N S
account w i l l surely be appreciated b y a w i d e ecumenical readership." D a v i d Fergusson, University o f E d i n b u r g h "An
engaging biblio-biographical study designed to show the critical
influence o f t e n theologians i n transforming t w e n t i e t h - c e n t u r y Catholicism. Kerr's keen
sense for trajectories
reveals h o w startling has been
From Neoscholasticism to Nuptial Mysticism
the
transformation — more than half had been disciplined by Vatican authorities In the face of these lives, no one w i l l ever be able to d o u b t the potential for intellectual regeneration, w h i l e the r i c h perspective they offer may also help defuse t r i v i a l tensions exacerbated by needless ideological polarization
Fergus K e r r
This narrative of t h e o l o g y - i n - a c t i o n is meant for literate faithful as w e l l as pastoral workers f r o m acolyte to bishop." D a v i d B u r r e l l , University o f N o t r e D a m e " K e r r , w i t h his usual oblique fluency, miraculously manages to include an attention to nuance and telling detail w i t h i n a short general account that is uner r i n g l y focussed o n w h a t , i n the previous century o f Catholic t h o u g h t , is still likely to matter i n the current one This v o l u m e w i l l surely become the standard i n t r o d u c t i o n to its subject matter." John M i l b a n k , University of N o t t i n g h a m " T h i s volume offers analysis o f some o f the most significant theologians o f the last h u n d r e d years by a theologian w i d e l y regarded as the most knowledgeable and insightful academic i n the field Simply invaluable." A l a n Torrance, St Andrews University
Blackwell Publishing
CONTENTS
© 2007 by Fergus K e r r BLACKWELL PUBLISHING 350 M a i n Street M a i d e n , M A 02148-5020. U S A 9600 Garsington R o a d , O x f o r d O X 4 2 D Q , U K 550 Swanston Street, C a r l t o n V i c t o r i a 3053. Australia T he r i g h t of Fergus K e r r l o be i d e n t i f i e d as the A u t h o r o f this W o r k has been asserted i n accordance w i t h the U K C o p y r i g h t , Designs and Patents A c t 1988 A l l rights reserved N o part of this p u b l i c a t i o n may be reproduced, stored i n a retrieval system or transmitted, i n any f o r m or b y any means, electronic, mechanical, p h o t o c o p y i n g , r e c o r d i n g or otherwise, except as p e r m i t t e d b y the U K C o p y r i g h t , Designs, and Patents A c t 1988 w i t h o u t the p r i o r permission o f the publisher
Preface
vii
First published 2 0 0 7 b y B l a c k w e l l P u b l i s h i n g L t d
L Before Vatican I I
1 2007 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication
Data
K e r r , Fergus T w e n t i e t h - c e n t u r y Catholic theologians: from neoscholasricism t o n u p t i a l mysticism / Fergus K e r r p. cm Includes bibliographical references and i n d e x I S B N - 1 3 : 9 7 8 - 1 - 4 0 5 1 - 2 0 8 3 - 8 (hardback: alk. paper) I S B N - 1 0 : 1-4051-2083-5 (hardback: alk. paper) I S B N - 1 3 : 9 7 8 - 1 - 4 0 5 1 - 2 0 8 4 - 5 (paperback: alk. paper) History—20th century 2 Theologians 1 Tide
1 Catholic C h u r c h — D o c t r i n e s —
B W 1 7 5 1 . 3 K 4 7 2007 230' 2 0 9 0 4 — d c 2 2 2006004748 A catalogue record f o r this title is available f r o m the B r i t i s h 1 ibrary Set i n 10
5ptBembo
by The R u n n i n g Head Limited Cambridge w w w therunninghead c o m P r i n t e d and b o u n d i n Singapore by Fabulous P r i m e r s Pre L t d The publisher's p o l i c y is to use p e r m a n e n t paper from mills that operate a sustainable forestry p o l i c y and w h i c h has been manufactured f r o m pu]p processed using acid-free and elementary chlorine-free practices Furthermore, the publisher ensures that the t e x t paper and cover board used have m e t acceptable environmental accreditation standards For f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n on B l a c k w e l l Publishing visit our website: wwwblackwellpublishing com
1
2 Marie-Dominique Chenu
17
3 Yves Congar
34
4 E d w a r d Schillebeeckx
52
5 H e n r i de Lubac
67
6 KarlRahner
87
7 Bernard Lonergan
105
8 Hans U r s v o n Balthasar
121
9 HansKüng
145
10 K a r o l W o j t y l a
163
11 Joseph Ratzinger
183
12 A f t e r Vatican I I
203
Appendix-. The A n t i - m o d e r n i s t O a t h
223
Index
226
PREFACE
'There is no d o u b t that the outstanding event i n the Catholic t h e o l o g y o f our century is the s u r m o u n t i n g o f neo-scholasticism',
so Walter Kasper
declared, i n 1987. A n y o n e w h o began o r d i n a t i o n studies i n 1957, as I d i d , 1
w o u l d agree That the century ended w i t h a reaffirmation of nuptial mysticism by influential theologians, w e d i d not anticipate 'Neo-scholasticism',
Kasper
explains, 'was the attempt to solve
the
m o d e r n crisis o f theology by p i c k i n g up the thread o f the h i g h scholastic t r a d i t i o n o f mediaeval times. T h e a i m was t o establish a timeless, unified theology that w o u l d provide a n o r m for the universal c h u r c h . I t is impossible to deny this attempt a certain grandeur B u t i n the l o n g r u n a restoration o f this k i n d was b o u n d to fail*
2
For one t h i n g , neoscholastic Catholicism
depended o n 'metaphysics', and developments b o t h w i t h i n Catholic t h e o l ogy and outside l e d to 'the b r e a k d o w n o f metaphysics i n t h e i r classic f o r m ' . B y classical metaphysics Kasper means 'the study o f the f i n a l , alld e t e r m i n i n g and c o h e r i n g foundations, w i s d o m about the oneness and wholeness o f reality'. I n Catholic theology, this study was essential: ' I n the total theological t r a d i t i o n h i t h e r t o , metaphysics w i t h its universal categories had p r o v i d e d the i n s t r u m e n t w i t h w h i c h to render i n the m e d i u m of t h o u g h t a theologically appropriate and reflective account of G o d , the one reality that — itself a l l - c o m p r e h e n d i n g and all-deter m i n i n g — yet transcends all else' Obviously, i n selecting some e m i n e n t theologians to discuss, m a n y others are left aside, i n c l u d i n g those w r i t i n g i n Italian and Spanish, a deplorable omission Also, the neoscholastic theologians w h o resisted the t r e n d should
1
2
Theology and Church
( L o n d o n : S C M Press 1 9 8 9 ) : 1 .
C f . James A . W e i s h e i p l , ' N e o s c h o l a s t i c i s m a n d N e o t h o m i s m , New
( N e w Y o r k : M c G r a w - H i l l 1967)
vol
10:337
Catholic
Encyclopedia
P R E F A C E
P R E F A C E
VIII
iX
have been examined o n their o w n and f o r their o w n sake Since they
son O P and Rebecca H a r k i n read the text i n draft, for w h i c h I t h a n k them,
published mostly i n Latin, their w o r k is n o w largely unread
Regrettably,
w h i l e of course declaring t h e m free of blame f o r blemishes that r e m a i n and
they appear here o n l y as spectral adversaries, no d o u b t caricatured as adver-
for prejudices o f m i n e that were n o t overcome. I am grateful to m y friend
saries i n controversy often are Some o f the theologians h i g h l i g h t e d here
Jacinta O ' D r i s c o l l O P f o r essential technical assistance and t o Eileen Power for
suffered harassment by neoscholastic colleagues and ecclesiastical superiors.
her careful and sympathetic copy-editing. I cannot resist adding a w o r d of
The R o m a n Catholic C h u r c h , one should n o t forget, is a c h u r c h of
thanks to L a r r y Page and Sergey B r i n , founders of the Internet search engine
extremes: tolerant o f forms o f d e v o t i o n barely distinguishable f r o m 'supersti-
Google, w i t h o u t w h i c h m y claims to learning w o u l d be even more tenuous
t i o n ' , w i t h pastoral care sometimes verging o n 'tyranny', and o f t e n ferocious i n resisting intellectual i n n o v a t i o n . Moreover, the fate o f theologians 3
cannot be separated f r o m p o w e r struggles w i t h i n the C h u r c h , or f r o m events i n the w i d e r w o r l d : the First W o r l d War, the rise o f fascism and Soviet c o m m u n i s m , the Second W o r l d War, and the C o l d War. These are only alluded to w h e n they brush the lives o f o u r subjects W h i l e neoscholasticism
will
n o t be restored i n the foreseeable future, the philosophical problems f o r theology raised d u r i n g the m o d e r n i s t crisis i n the first decade o f the t w e n t i eth century seem as troublesome as ever. W h e t h e r the c o u n t e r - c u l t u r a l emphasis o n a certain nuptial mysticism, i n ecclesiology and theological anthropology and elsewhere i n Catholic C h r i s t i a n doctrine, w i l l carry us far i n t o the n e w century, remains to be seen These chapters derive mostly f r o m lectures at Blackfriars, O x f o r d . Versions o f chapter one were offered as the Saint Thomas Aquinas Lecture at the N a t i o n a l U n i v e r s i t y o f Ireland, M a y n o o t h , i n M a r c h 2005; at the j o i n t m e e t i n g of the Society f o r the Study o f T h e o l o g y and the Irish Theological Society at D r u m c o n d r a , i n A p r i l 2005; and as the Glasmacher Lecture at Saint-Paul University, O t t a w a , i n N o v e m b e r 2005 The chapter o n Joseph Ratzinger derives f r o m the address w h i c h I gave w h e n receiving the Yves Congar A w a r d at B a r r y University, Florida, i n O c t o b e r 2005, w h i l e the chapter o n Yves Congar comes f r o m the D i s c e r n A n n u a l Lecture 2005 at the Institute for Research o n the Signs o f the Times i n M a l t a M y thanks go to D r Thomas A E Kelly, D r Paul D M u r r a y , D r R i c h a r d Feist, D r E d Sunshine and Fr M a r k W e d i g O P , and Fr Joseph Inguanez, respectively, for these invitations, and m u c h enjoyable hospitality Several friends have read parts of the text. V i v i a n B o l a n d O P , N e i l Fergu-
3
C f J o h n H e n r y N e w m a n ' s Preface t o t h e T h i r d E d i t i o n (187 7) o£ Lectures on the
Office of the Church the Anglican
Church,
viewed relatively to Romanism
and Popular Protestantism,
Prophetical
i n The 'Via Media'
of
e d i t e d b y H D . W e i d n e r ( O x f o r d : C l a r e n d o n Press 1 9 9 0 ) : 10—57, i n
w h i c h he sees t h e d y n a m i c i n t h e C h u r c h i n t e r m s o f t h e t h r e e f o l d f u n c t i o n s o f w o r s h i p , t h e o l o g y a n d r u l e , t h e first t e n d i n g t o ' s u p e r s t i t i o n a n d e n t h u s i a s m '
the second t o ' r a t i o n a l -
i s m ' , a n d t h e t h i r d t o ' a m b i t i o n craft a n d c r u e l t y ' , each c o r r e c t e d b y t h e others i d e a l l y i n 'a ;
t r u c e o r a c o m p r o m i s e ' — ' t y r a n n y ' is N e w m a n ' s w o r d
Chapter One BEFORE VATICAN II
A c c o r d i n g to Pope J o h n Paul I I , w r i t i n g i n 1998, 'the m o r e distinguished o f the Catholic theologians of this century, to whose reflections and researches Vatican I I owes so m u c h ' , were all 'educated i n the school of t h e Angelic Doctor'
1
R e a s o n under O a t h The essential t h i n g , f o r Catholic theologians b o r n between 1890 and 1940, was that they should be g r o u n d e d i n 'thomistic philosophy' This was to inoculate t h e m against i n f e c t i o n by the idealist, subjectivist and positivist philosophies, w h i c h were held to have created 'the modernist crisis'
2
A c c o r d i n g to C a n o n Taw, clergy were required to attend lectures i n p h i l osophy
and theology, delivered i n L a t i n , by professors
who
treated
everything according t o the m e t h o d , d o c t r i n e and principles o f the Angelic D o c t o r , Saint Thomas A q u i n a s Moreover, all clergy, pastors, seminary p r o 3
fessors and so o n , swore the A n t i - m o d e r n i s t O a t h imposed i n 1910
'
P o p e J o h n P a u l I I , E n c y c l i c a l L e t t e r Fides
ct Ratio,
(see
15 S e p t e m b e r 1998 ( n u m e r o u s e d i -
tions): § § 5 7 - 9 2
T h e l i t e r a t u r e is i n u n e n s e ; see D i r r e l l j o d o t k (ed ) Catholicism
Roman
Catholic
Modernism
and Anti-Modernnm
in Historical
Context
Contending
with
Modernity.
(Cambridge: Cambridge
U n i v e r s i t y Press 2 0 0 0 ) 3
N o o n e i m a g i n e d t h a t lay m e n , let a l o n e w o m e n , c o u l d be t h e o l o g i a n s t h o u g h consider
M a r y D a l y ( b o r n 1928), w h o t o o k a different t u r n , b u t whose doctorates i n p h i l o s o p h y and t h e o l o g y w i t h t h e D o m i n i c a n s at t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f F r i b o u r g , S w i t z e r l a n d are g o o d examples o f n e o s c h o l a s t i c i s m : 77?i Problem of Speculative Natural 1966)
Knowledge
of Cod in the Philosophy
Jlieology
( W a s h i n g t o n : T h o m i s t Press 1965) and
of Jacques Maritain
(Rome: O f f i c i u m L i b r i Catholici
2
BEFORE VATICAN
BEFORE
I I
appendix) The philosophy examinations, to be passed before students p r o ceeded to theology, were framed i n terms o f the T w e n t y - f o u r Thomistic Theses. 4
Paradoxically, the revival o f Thomistic philosophy i n the wake o f Leo
VATICAN
3
II
w h a t the believer says, as i f the t r u t h s o f faith m i g h t differ f r o m the truths o f historical fact W e do n o t accept biblical exegesis that is supposedly 'neutral' and 'scientific' Finally, w e are most o f all concerned t o u p h o l d the n o t i o n o f there being absolute and unchangeable truths.
X I I I ' s directive, i n t e n d e d to keep m o d e r n philosophy o u t o f Catholicism, and especially G e r m a n R o m a n t i c i s m , kept to very m u c h the same canons o f
T h e Thomistic Theses
rationality as we f i n d i n the Enlightenment. The E n l i g h t e n m e n t ideal was to attain timeless, universal and objective conclusions by exercising a u n i t a r y and ahistorical form of reasoning. Similarly, neoscholastic theology ' i d e n t i -
I t is easy to see w h a t the p r o b l e m was: the nature of truth W h e t h e r i m p o s i n g
fied t r u t h and life w i t h i m m u t a b i l i t y and rationality; i t opposed being to
a f r a m e w o r k f o r the study o f philosophy i n the f o r m o f the T w e n t y - f o u r
5
history and i g n o r e d concreteness i n h u m a n life and i n the economy o f sal-
Thomistic Theses was a wise m o v e m i g h t w e l l be questioned.
vation'
For neothomists, as f o r E n l i g h t e n m e n t philosophers, appealing to
extent the average seminary philosophy course actually c o n f o r m e d to the
experience, t r a d i t i o n and historical studies was the w r o n g way to get to
pattern seems d o u b t f u l M o s t seminarians - straight f r o m school - were i n
truth
any case never destined to be competent i n philosophy They c o u l d do little
6
The w o r d ' m o d e r n i s m ' settled i n Catholic parlance i n the early t w e n t i e t h century, for example i n the encyclical Pascendi Dotninici Pope Pius X i n 1907
Gregis issued by
Setting aside the absurdly bombastic style of papal
documents i n those days, the m o d e r n i s m w h i c h the encyclical attacks is
To what
m o r e than learn the arguments o f f by heart, to reproduce i n the brief (always oral) examinations. The course was d i v i d e d i n t o ontology, cosmology, psychology and t h e o d icy: dealing, then, w i t h being, nature, soul and G o d , respectively
amazingly l i k e postmodernism: 'Postmodernity is a style o f t h o u g h t w h i c h
T h e p o i n t o f the eight theses i n o n t o l o g y was to secure the difference
is suspicious o f classical notions o f t r u t h , reason, i d e n t i t y and objectivity, o f
b e t w e e n that w h i c h is pure act and that w h i c h is composed of p o t e n c y and
the idea o f universal progress or emancipation, o f single frameworks, grand
act. P r i o r to any consideration o f the biblical doctrine o f creation, that is to
nar ratives o r ultimate grounds o f explanation'
say, the student learns h o w to explain that there is a radical difference i n
7
The A n t i - m o d e r n i s t O a t h asserts the R o m a n Catholic Church's c o m m i t -
b e i n g between G o d and e v e r y t h i n g else G o d is n o t a being i n the same
m e n t to intellect, and articulates fears o f the effects i n theology o f a n t i -
w a y as we are; G o d is i d e n t i f i e d as 'pure act o f being', ipsum esse subsisten.^
intellectualism
dependent o n n o e n t i t y or event to be G o d
The existence o f G o d , i t is asserted, may be k n o w n f o r
There is no p o t e n t i a l i t y i n
certain and proved by arguments f r o m cause and effect That is to say, we are
G o d ; that w o u l d mean G o d r e q u i r e d some other e n t i t y or event to c o m -
n o t dependent o n faith, feeling, i n t u i t i o n or instinct, f o r this belief There
plete H i m . There is n o 'possibility' i n G o d , potential that needs to be
are objective external criteria f o r the t r u t h o f Christianity; i t is n o t all a
realized This is a matter o f rational demonstration; n o t s o m e t h i n g we take
matter o f subjective psychological states. The i n s t i t u t i o n o f the C h u r c h ,
o n faith
i n c l u d i n g the papacy, was f o u n d e d by Jesus Christ, historically, p r i o r to his
Some beings composed of potency and act are corporeal, and some 'of
death. There is no such t h i n g as ' e v o l u t i o n o f d o c t r i n e ' , i f b y this is meant
these have souls, as the five theses i n cosmology m a i n t a i n Basically, the
change i n meaning. Faith is n o t a ' b l i n d feeling'; i t is real assent to true
p o i n t here was to secure proper understanding o f the (relative) a u t o n o m y o f
propositions. Those w h o swear this oath endorse the anti-modernist u t t e r -
the natural order, w i t h its intrinsic teleology This was i m p o r t a n t : the physi-
ances o f Pope Pius X , especially i n relation to 'the so-called history o f
cal w o r l d had to be s h o w n to w o r k o n its o w n natural principles — i t was not
dogmas'
sustained by regular infusions o f divine grace, i t was not a permanent miracle.
There is no distinction between w h a t the historian may say and
I n short, natural science is possible. I n some ways, cosmology was the decisive element o f the c u r r i c u l u m w h i c h secured the A r i s t o t e l i a n basis o f 4
See w w w v a x x i n e c o m / h y o o m i k / a q u i n a s / t h e s e s . e h t
5
Alasdair M a c h i t y r e Three Rival
6
T h o m a s F. O ' M e a r a O P Thomas Aquinas
for
Versions of Mora! Enquiry Theologian
L a t i n text and translation ( L o n d o n : D u c k w o r t h 1990): 65
(Notre Dame, I N , and L o n d o n : U n i -
versity o f N o t r e D a m e Press 1 9 9 9 ) : i 71 7
T P E a g l e t o n , The Illusions
ojPostmodernism
( O x f o r d : B l a c k w e l l 1996): v i i
neoscholastic T h o m i s m The theses i n psychology m a i n t a i n that the h u m a n soul is b y nature i m m o r t a l (Thesis 15); there is n o body/soul dualism (16); yet the intellect operates independently of any b o d i l y organ (17); o u r minds have direct
4
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
B E F O R E
I I
V A T I C A N
5
I I
knowledge o f the natures o f things (20); and the w i l l is subordinate to the
theological m o d e r n i s m , b y censorship, sackings and e x c o m m u n i c a t i o n - and
intellect (21)
the resurgence of issues that c o u l d n o t be repressed by such methods.
The w h o l e course culminates i n the three theses i n theodicy: the existence o f G o d is demonstrable b y cosmological arguments (22); the d i v i n e
Modernism
nature is appropriately i d e n t i f i e d as pure act or subsistent b e i n g (23); G o d alone may be said to create (24).. M u c h m i g h t be said about these theses. As the standard course books w o u l d show, cosmology i n c l u d e d consideration o f such terms as substance
The easiest access to the p r o b l e m set by theological m o d e r n i s m is
Medieval-
ism, the very readable b o o k published i n 1908 b y the f o r m e r Jesuit George
and accident, f o r m and matter, the philosophical t e r m i n o l o g y required (for
Tyrrell (1861-1909)
example) f o r the d o c t r i n e o f transubstantiation. Theodicy, obviously, covers
Catholic i n L o n d o n i n 1879 and entered the Society o f Jesus. Set to teach
only the o p e n i n g moves i n natural theology - n o t e x t e n d i n g to justifying
philosophy to Jesuit students he was soon transferred to other duties (jour-
the ways o f G o d i n the l i g h t o f the p r o b l e m o f evil.
nalism, c o n d u c t i n g retreats), o n the grounds that he was sponsoring 'pure
I n psychology the p r o g r a m m e was to e x p o u n d the metaphysical a r g u ments that prove that w e have i m m o r t a l souls - i t is not j u s t a matter of faith, or i n t u i t i o n . Independently o f w h e t h e r w e are to be raised f r o m the dead, there are metaphysical arguments that demonstrate h u m a n i m m o r t a l i t y Second, our k n o w l e d g e o f things is o f things as they are, n o t o n l y of h o w
9
B o r n i n D u b l i n , raised A n g l i c a n , he became a
T h o m i s m ' rather than the required 'Suarezianism'
H i s w r i t i n g s became
steadily m o r e u n o r t h o d o x H e was expelled f r o m the Society i n 1906. H e d i e d o f Bright's disease, ' f o r t i f i e d b y the rites o f the C h u r c h ' , absolved by three priests, denied a Catholic funeral (however) by the bishop since none c o u l d say that he 'recanted'
1 0
Cardinal Mercier, Archbishop o f Malines and Primate of B e l g i u m , had
they seem - w e are n o t prey to varieties o f phenomenalism that lay us o p e n to the anxieties over w h e t h e r w e have k n o w l e d g e o f a n y t h i n g outside o u r
addressed his f l o c k o n the subject of m o d e r n i s m
o w n heads.
t h e m that the heresies, p r i n c i p a l l y i n France and Italy, had scarcely a single
n
W h y , w h e n he assures
Finally, the existence o f G o d is philosophically demonstrable Here again,
adherent i n B e l g i u m , remains mysterious. M o d e r n i s m , anyway, Mercier says,
we are n o t dependent o n i n t u i t i o n i s m , a priori considerations o r mere faith.
is the v i e w that believers draw the object and motive o f their f a i t h f r o m
I t is possible to reason one's way to the t r u t h that G o d exists - this is n o t a
themselves, denying historically revealed t r u t h and thus also the teaching
t r u t h that w e learn f r o m the testimony or o n the a u t h o r i t y o f others, n o r
author ity of the C h u r c h . M o d e r n i s m is a f o r m of Protestantism: f a i t h under-
one that wells up f r o m w i t h i n , as the p r o d u c t o f instinct, feeling o r
stood as 'private judgment'. This Protestant spirit has infected Catholic
intuition
consciousness. Mercier singles o u t 'the English priest Tyrrell'. A g a i n , w h y he
I n short, theologians were expected to take their stand o n the realist metaphysics, philosophy o f science, epistemology and natural theology, framed no
d i d so, since few churchgoers i n B e l g i u m c o u l d have k n o w n o f his existence, let alone o f his w r i t i n g s , remains puzzling
1 2
U n d a u n t e d , indeed exhilarated, by this personal attack, Tyrrell, w i t h
d o u b t somewhat abstractly by the Thomistic Theses - w h i c h nonetheless show that the Christian faith, at least i n its Catholic f o r m , is n o t against all reason. O n the contrary, as every Thomist knows, 'Grace does n o t obliterate nature but perfects i t , just as natural reason subserves faith and the natural
9
inclination o f the w i l l yields to charity' (Summa Theologies 1 a
b r i d g e W e l l s : B u r n s a n d Oates 1994)
l,8ad2m).
I n their o w n way, the pastors o f the R o m a n Catholic C h u r c h were determ i n e d to u p h o l d the claims o f reason against a generation o f theologians w h o m they suspected o f o p t i n g rather f o r the a u t h o r i t y o f i n t u i t i o n , testimony, t r a d i t i o n , and especially 'experience'
8
The history o f t w e n t i e t h -
century Catholic theology is the history o f the attempted e l i m i n a t i o n o f
T h i r d revised a n d e n l a r g e d e d i t i o n 1 9 0 9 r e p r i n t e d w i t h f o r e w o r d b y G a b r i e l D a l y ( T u n -
1 0
Cf. Ellen M
L e o n a r d , George Tyrrell and the Catholic
Tradition
( L o n d o n : D a r t o n . T^ngman
a n d T o d d 1 9 8 2 ) ; N i c h o l a s Sagovsky, 'On God's Side': A Life of George Tyrrell ( O x f o r d : C l a r e n d o n Press 1990) 1 1
D e s i r e M e r c i e r ( 1 8 5 1 - 1 9 2 6 ) t h e first professor o f T h o m i s t P h i l o s o p h y at L o u v a i n was a n ;
ardent p r o m o t e r o f neoscholasticism
a n d a valiant o p p o n e n t o f t h e G e r m a n o c c u p a t i o n
of
B e l g i u m i n 1 9 1 4 - 1 8 H e set u p t h e M a l i n e s C o n v e r s a t i o n s 1 9 2 1 - 5 . c u t s h o r t b y h i s death, t o respond to the A n g l o - C a t h o l i c r e u n i o n initiative 1 2
H
Alessandro M a g g i o l i n i ,
Magisterial teaching o n experience i n the t w e n t i e t h century;
f r o m t h e M o d e r n i s t crisis t o t h e S e c o n d V a t i c a n C o u n c i l ' , Communio
23 ( 1 9 9 6 ) : 2 2 4 - 4 3
A b b o t C o l u m b a M a r m i o n o f M a r e d s o u s h a d a p p r o a c h e d M e r c i e r about a c c e p t i n g T y r r e l l
f o r i n c a r d i n a t i o n i n M a l i n e s diocese; g r a t e f u l f o r M e r c i e r ' s interest his c o n d i t i o n s ( n o p r e a c h i n g o r p u b l i s h i n g )
I y r r e l l w o u l d n o t accept
6
B E F O R E
V A I I C A N
I I
B E F O R E
Mercier's permission, translated the pastoral so that he c o u l d reply A f t e r
V A I I C A N
7
I I
Tyrrell writes w i t h gusto. H e was a journalist, n o t a scholar, as he m i g h t
some p o l i t e remarks he w e n t o n the offensive: T n spite o f ail their t h e o -
have agreed i n Through Scylla and Charybdis
logical heresies and divisions, the religious interest still lives and grows i n
symbolic approach to religious t r u t h , w h i c h deprives the concept o f t r u t h of
Protestant countries, whereas i t languishes and dies a m o n g Catholics under
its meaning; and i n the posthumous Christianity
this m o d e r n craze f o r centralization and m i l i t a r y u n i f o r m i t y '
ages C h r i s t i a n i t y as developing i n t o a universal religion I n these books he
1 3
Whatever
(1907) he sympathizes w i t h a at the Cross-Roads
he envis-
the Cardinal says, i t is the vitality o f f a i t h that is the source and c r i t e r i o n o f
moves w e l l beyond Catholic o r t h o d o x y I n Medievalism,
d o c t r i n a l t r u t h , w h i c h is n o t the same t h i n g as i n d i v i d u a l subjectivity.
real questions, albeit i n an i n f l a m m a t o r y manner
Indeed, i f there is a subjectivism threatening the C h u r c h , i t is the ' i n d i v i d u -
dealt w i t h : governance i n the C h u r c h ; the d i g n i t y and role of laity; and the
alistic conception o f papal a u t h o r i t y ' . Since 1870, catechisms and seminary
concepts o f experience and t r a d i t i o n as l o c i o f t r u t h
textbooks have been revised to impose the heresy o f u l t r a m o n t a n i s m - 'to destroy the c o n s t i t u t i o n o f the C h u r c h ; to make ornamental nonentities o f the bishops; and to substitute, as the r u l e of faith, the private j u d g m e n t o f the Pope instead o f the p u b l i c j u d g m e n t o f the w h o l e C h u r c h as represented by the entire episcopate'.
14
T h e lay Catholic's place is n o t j u s t 'to
receive the faith passively as one receives a traveller's tale o f regions b e y o n d his ken; a tale w h i c h he repeats to others w o r d for w o r d f o r w h a t i t is w o r t h , b u t w i t h no guarantee o f personal experience or c o n v i c t i o n ' O n the c o n trary, 'the laity are part o f the C h u r c h ' : ' Y o u forget that every baptized Christian is commissioned apostle and teacher; and as such is no mere telephone, but must speak f r o m the fulness o f a l i v i n g personal interest i n the t r u t h o f his r e l i g i o n ' Teaching
1 5
O f course there is a distinction between the ' C h u r c h
and the ' C h u r c h
Taught' -
the hierarchy and the faithful
However, p r i o r i t y lies w i t h 'a D i v i n e Tradition o f w h i c h the entire C h u r c h ,
however, he raised
They w o u l d have to be
H e was n o t f o r g o t t e n at Vatican I I O n 1 October 1963, i n a powerful speech, Ernesto R u f f i n i , Cardinal Archbishop o f Palermo, a major figure at the C o u n c i l , i n f o r m e d the assembly that the idea o f the C h u r c h as a sacram e n t came from Tyrrell. H e was probably indebted to Joseph C Fenton, the most eminent A m e r i c a n theologian at the C o u n c i l , w h o complained that the w h o l e of the first chapter of Lumen Gentium, the document o n the nature :
of the C h u r c h , was composed i n the language o f Tyrrell. That the C h u r c h as hierarchical institution (chapter 3) should be treated after the C h u r c h as mystery (chapter 1) and as people o f G o d (chapter 2) w o u l d surely have seemed to Tyrrell a g o o d way o f laying o u t the doctrine That the likes of R u f f i n i and Fenton. significant members of the ultramontanist m i n o r i t y at Vatican I I , should f i n d Lumen however, a salutary thought
Gentium
to reek of modernist heresy is,
1 8
and n o t merely the episcopate, is the organ and depositary' ' Tradition is the faith that lives i n the w h o l e C h u r c h and is handed d o w n f r o m generation to
Alternatives to
generation, o f w h i c h the entire body, and n o t a mere handful of officials, is the depositary and organ o f transmission
O f this rule and l a w the H o l y
Spirit diffused i n the hearts o f the f a i t h f u l is the author; the episcopate merely the servant, the witness, the interpreter' .
1 6
Tyrrell attacks the ' n e w
theology', according to w h i c h a bishop i n his diocese is m e r e l y the delegate or vicar o f the Bishop o f R o m e .
H e defends the C h u r c h o f England
('We have m u c h to learn f r o m h e r ' ) . H e mocks the idea that he is 'leader' o f any movement. Finally, his ' m e t h o d o f i m m a n e n t i s m ' , w h i c h M e r c i e r denounces, is indebted, n o t to c r y p t o - K a n t i a n Protestantism, as alleged, b u t to the Exercises o f St Ignatius o f L o y o l a .
17
Even d u r i n g the decades w h e n T h o m i s t philosophy was mandatory, many significant theologians w o r k e d o n quite different lines
Medievalism:
1 4
I b i d : 50
1 5
I b i d : 59
43
I n Germany, for
example, neither Karl A d a m (1876-1966) nor R o m a n o Guardini (1885-1968) was Thomist, i n any sense. K a r l A d a m , trained as a patristic scholar at the U n i v e r s i t y of M u n i c h , w i t h books o n Tertullian's concept o f c h u r c h (1907) and Augustine's d o c t r i n e o f the eucharist (1908), taught all his life at Tübingen. B u i l d i n g o n t h e legacy o f the Catholic Tübingen S c h o o l ,
1 8
1 1
Neoscholasticism
G
19
he presented the C h u r c h as p r i m a r i l y a
A l b e r i g o a n d J A K o m o n c h a k ( e d s ) History
Second Period
and
Intersesiion
September
L e u v e n : Peelers 2 0 0 0 ) : 50 ( R u f f i n i ) , 3 0
of Vatican 11, v o l I I I The Mature
1963-September
1964
Council
( M a r y k n o l l , N Y : O r b i s , and
(Fenton)
F o r the C a t h o l i c T ü b i n g e n S c h o o l see James I i m s t e a d B u r t c h a e l l esc, i n N i n i a n Smart
1 6
I b i d : 61
a n d o t h e r s (eds) Nineteenth
1 7
I b i d : 104
U n i v e r s i t y Press 1 9 8 5 ) : 1 1 1 - 3 9
Century
Religious
Thought
in the West ( C a m b r i d g e : C a m b r i d g e
8
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
I I
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
9
I I
c o m m u n i t y , indeed as 'mystical b o d y o f C h r i s t ' , contrasting this quite d e l i b -
C o u n c i l accepted m u c h o f the agenda that he had stood for all his life, he
erately w i t h the prevailing neoscholastic image o f the C h u r c h as a 'perfect
was sceptical about the likely results H e refused Pope Paul VI's i n v i t a t i o n to
society', and, o n the other extreme, w i t h liberal Protestantism's fuzzy eccle-
become a cardinal
siologies.. I n the 1920s he c o n t r i b u t e d t o the development o f 'kerygmatic theology', Verkündigungstheologie,
i n this instance steering b e t w e e n the syl-
Immensely influential, w i t h dozens of books, G u a r d i n i never engaged w i t h historical-critical biblical exegesis H e w r o t e about the C h u r c h w i t h -
logistically expounded C h r i s t o l o g y o f neoscholastic textbooks and the ' l i f e -
o u t r e f e r r i n g t o Vatican I.. H e w r o t e manifestly Catholic theology w i t h o u t
of-jesus research' o f liberal Protestantism.
frequendy c i t i n g papal encyclicals, as was the style o f the day. R e l a t i n g
A d a m , delated to R o m e (need i t be said?), revised several o f his books to reduce suspicions o f his o r t h o d o x y L i k e others i n the Tübingen t r a d i t i o n ,
theology to culture and literature, he w r o t e o n Dostoevsky, Pascal, Dante, Hölderlin, R i l k e , and m u c h else
w i t h its R o m a n t i c emphasis o n c o m m u n i t y , he was attracted, initially, i n the early 1930s, to the p a t r i o t i s m and f a m i l y values p r o c l a i m e d b y the N a t i o n a l
That neither K a r l A d a m n o r R o m a n o G u a r d i n i belonged to any religious order, is no accident — n o r that they had tenure i n G e r m a n universities
Socialist G e r m a n Workers' Patty Too o l d to play a part i n the r u n - u p to Vatican I I , his books nevertheless helped to prepare some o f his compatriots for the unexpectedly radical event
Neoscholasticism
2 0
R o m a n o G u a r d i n i , Italian by b i r t h , g i e w up i n M a i n z
2 1
H e studied at
Freiburg i m Breisgau and Tübingen, before g o i n g to the diocesan seminar)',
I n most seminaries and universities t h r o u g h o u t the Catholic w o r l d , however,
where he f o u n d the neoscholastic textbooks insufferable. Back i n Freiburg
philosophy and theolog)' were taught strictly ad mentem Sancti Thoma?
f o r doctoral studies, he w o r k e d o n Bonaventure's teaching o n r e d e m p t i o n
best account, by A n t h o n y Kenny, recalls his experience at the Gregoriana,
2 3
The
This choice o f topic, and unconcealed scorn for neoscholasticism, prevented
the great Jesuit university i n R o m e , f r o m 1949 to 1 9 5 6 .
his b e i n g appointed, as he had expected, to teach i n the diocesan seminary
Dezza, the Professor o f Metaphysics: 'sitting totally motionless, he enunci-
Anyway, parish m i n i s t r y soon gave way to m i l i t a r y service as a medical
ated rheumily, i n a barely audible voice, theses about t h e analogy o f being
orderly (1916-18). I n 1918, t h r o u g h his sympathy w i t h the B e n e d i c t i n e -
and the varieties of potentiality and actuality'.. Later, i n his theology years,
inspired liturgical m o v e m e n t i n Germany, he published his first, immensely
so K e n n y reports, neither the B i b l e n o r the Summa Theohgiee was m u c h
influential b o o k , Vom Geht der Liturgie
23
H e recalls Paolo
H e was i n v o l v e d w i t h the C a t h o l i c
studied H e d i d not appreciate Bernard Lonergan then as he d i d later, for his
y o u t h movement, centred at B u r g Rothenfels. I n 1923, he accepted a n e w l y
Aquinas books: he 'lectured w i t h an air o f b o r e d o m that q u i c k l y c o m m u n i -
established chair i n B e r l i n , t h o u g h his Protestant colleagues were so u n -
cated itself to his audience'
w e l c o m i n g that he agreed to the f i c t i o n that he was a visiting professor
grace, 'the best lecturer I have heard i n a l i f e t i m e o f l e c t u r e - g o i n g ' (no small
Breslau
from
I n M a r c h 1939, the N a z i regime abolished the post, forbade his
c o m p l i m e n t f r o m an O x f o r d don)
ministry w i t h y o u t h , and i n 1941 banned h i m f r o m speaking i n public A m o n g the first academics to be reinstated, he taught at Tübingen, before j o i n i n g the philosophy faculty at the U n i v e r s i t y o f M u n i c h , where he remained u n t i l retirement i n 1962
H e t o o k part i n the pre-Vatican I I
l i t u r g y commission t h o u g h n o t i n the C o u n c i l itself W h i l e seeing that the
H e tecalis M a u r i z i o Flick o n the t h e o l o g y of
Classes were huge N o one studied p r i m a r y sources Cyclostyled lecture notes became available as technology advanced The b r i g h t students relied o n secondary literature, i n Latin, such as the textbooks o f G r e d t
24
and Billot
Joseph A u g u s t Gredt (1863-1940), b o r n i n L u x e m b o u r g , a Benedictine m o n k , studied i n R o m e w i t h D o m i n i c a n Thomists such as A l b e r t o Lepidi, and Tbmmaso Zigliara. H e taught p h i l o s o p h y i n R o m e f o r 40 years. Interested i n physics and biology, he became a legend f o r his t w o - v o l u m e
2 0
See R o b e r t A
K r i e g , Kar! Adam:
Catholicism
in German
Culture
(Notre Dame, I N , and
2 1
See R o b e r t A
K r i e g Romano
Guardini
A Precursor
textbook, Elementa philosophies amtotelico-thomisticce, 1899 and 1901, reissued i n expanded editions i n t o the 1960s, 'the classical t e x t b o o k of thomisdc
L o n d o n : U n i v e r s i t y o f N o t r e D a m e Press 1992) oj Vatican II ( N o t r e D a m e . I N and
L o n d o n : U n i v e r s i t y o f N o t r e D a m e Press 1 9 9 7 ) . 2 2
Supervised by Engelbert Krebs
( 1 8 8 1 - 1 9 5 0 ) , w h o c o n d u c t e d his f r i e n d
Heidegger's
w e d d i n g i n 1917; p r i m a r i l y a m e d i e v a l i s t , be was r e m o v e d f r o m t e a c h i n g b y t h e N a z i s i n 1938
2 3
A Path from Rome. An Autobiography
( L o n d o n : S i d g w i c k a n d Jackson 1 9 8 5 ) : 4 7 ( D e z z a ) , 77
( L o n e r g a n ) 77 ( F l i c k ) 2 +
C f A W M i i l l e r i n New Catholic
Encyclopedia
V I ( 1 9 6 7 ) : 725
10
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
I I
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
I I
11
philosophy', still i n use 20 years after his death Gredt's p o s i t i o n was w o r k e d
Theobgiœ
out i n opposition to e x t e r n a l - w o r i d scepticism and the other problems o f
achievement
post-Cartesian philosophy. The problematic s h o u l d n o t be unfamiliar to
clarifications offered by a select b a n d of sixteenth-century
student theologians.
There was, however, n o p o i n t i n p a y i n g m u c h attention t o h o w his thought
- was an unsurpassed and unsurpassable speculative theological I t m i g h t , and indeed should, be studied i n the l i g h t o f the commentators
Louis B i l l o t (1846-1931), a French Jesuit, taught f o r years i n R o m e . H e
interacted w i t h that o f his contemporaries o r h o w i t was shaped by his
is perhaps best remembered f o r resigning as Cardinal i n 1927, unable to
inheritance f r o m earlier Christian thinkers (let alone Jewish and M u s l i m
accept the papal c o n d e m n a t i o n of the u l t r a - r i g h t w i n g m o v e m e n t Française
Action
Billot's books, massive and w e l l d o c u m e n t e d , f r o m his De Verba
ones). O n the other hand, g o o d students should w o r k o n A r i s t o t l e and Aquinas's commentaries
o n A r i s t o t l e Otherwise, k n o w i n g n o t h i n g o f
incarnato (1892) onwards, constitute by far the most impressive b o d y of
Aquinas's grandeur as a metaphysician, they w o u l d misunderstand h i m
Catholic theology as i t existed at the b e g i n n i n g o f the t w e n t i e t h century,
completely
covering all the m a i n topics Neglected, i f not completely f o r g o t t e n , Billot's w o r k w o u l d need to be explored i n any attempt t o w r i t e a balanced and comprehensive
history o f m o d e r n Catholic theology, w h i c h w o u l d do
N a t u r a l Metaphysics
justice to all sides.
There was no way of e n t e r i n g Catholic theology w i t h o u t first d o i n g philosophy — learning to master the d o c t r i n e laid o u t i n the 'perennial philosophy',
T h o m i s m at the A n g e l i c u m
and, secondarily, laying bare and r e f u t i n g all the w r o n g philosophies I n the key text, La synthèse thomiste (1946) w e can see Garrigou-Lagrange at his
The m o d e l T h o m i s t - n o t o n l y i n D o m i n i c a n m y t h o l o g y — was R e g i n a l d Garrigou-Tagrange
most characteristic
2 7
B o r n i n 1877, he had a conversion, w h i l e a medical
As regards the positive exposition, the author insists that, i n Aristotle,
student, t h r o u g h reading w o r k b y Ernest H e l l o ( 1 8 2 8 - 8 5 ) , the somewhat
Aquinas discovered the 'natural metaphysics o f h u m a n intelligence', a meta-
maverick, radically conservative ultramontanist B r e t o n w r i t e r . H e j o i n e d
physics w h i c h , b e g i n n i n g w i t h sense experience, rises progressively u n t i l i t
the French D o m i n i c a n s , studied and taught at Te Saulchoir before m o v i n g
reaches G o d , actus purus and noesis noeseos, 'sheer being' i n Aquinas's phrase,
to R o m e , w h e r e he lectured at the C o l l e g i o A n g e l i c o , the D o m i n i c a n u n i -
and ' s e l f - k n o w i n g ' i n Aristotle's As this argument unfolds i t delivers a
versity, f r o m 1909
H e supervised the doctoral
philosophy o f being, an ontology, d i f f e r i n g entirely f r o m philosophies of
research of M . - D C h e n u and the future Pope John Paul I I . H e gave the
appearance (phenomenalism), o f b e c o m i n g (evolutionism), and o f the ego
2 5
u n t i l he retired i n 1960.
retreat i n Paris w h i c h attracted Yves C o u g a r to leave the diocesan seminary
(psychologism) Phenomenalism is still o n the market, t h e others w e m i g h t
i n order to j o i n the D o m i n i c a n s
H e was a controversial figure, m u c h
be i n c l i n e d to relabel as process t h o u g h t and subjectivism; but the m a i n aim
admired b u t also o f t e n caricatured, even demonized His b i g b o o k o n G o d ,
o f philosophical studies for neophyte theologians had t o be to establish for
for example, is n o t as dreadful as some have asserted: 'the G o d o f the Bible
themselves a moderate f o r m of metaphysical, epistemological and moral
and the Gospel has been reduced to a caput mortuum o f frozen abstractions
realism.
overwhelmingly b o r i n g . tautology'
n o t h i n g b u t a gigantic and futile exercise i n
2 6
B e i n g , reality, w h i c h is w h a t intellect first apprehends, is not the b e i n g of G o d , n o r the being o f the cognizing subject, Garrigou-Lagrange insists. I n
For Garrigou-Tagrange, Thomas Aquinas's w o r k - chiefly the
Summa
other words, he suspects that the neophytes are strongly tempted to think that either G o d or oneself is the p r i m a r y d a t u m of knowledge. Against this, so he contends, we have to see that being, reality, exists i n t h e sense-
2 5
C f . R i c h a r d P e d d i c o r d , The Sacred Monster
of Reginald 2 6
Thus
Garrigou-Tagrange Louis Bouyer
of Thomism:
An Introduction
to the Life and
Legacy
O P ( S o u t h B e n d , I N : St A u s t i n ' s Press 2 0 0 5 )
(1913—2004). f o r m e r l y a L u t h e r a n pastor, p r i e s t o f the
French
perceptible w o r l d
This means that knowledge o f God's existence and
nature is mediated: i n k n o w i n g things i n the w o r l d we can argue f r o m effect
O r a t o r y h i m s e l f a m a j o r t h e o l o g i a n , N e w m a n scholar a n d l i t u r g i s t . w h o n e v e r e n d u r e d s e m i nary neoscholasticism:
cf.
The
Invisible
( E d i n b u r g h : I & L C l a r k 1999): 248
Fathei
Approaches
to the
Mystery
of the
Divinity
2 7
Reality
A
Synthesis
of Ihomistic
c h a p t e r s u m m a r i z e s this b o o k
Thought
(St L o u i s , M O : H e r d e r 1 9 5 2 ) : t h e rest o f this
12
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
B E F O R E
I I
to cause - b u t i t is the w o r l d that w e k n o w i n the first place. W e do n o t have
Alternative
some basic innate k n o w l e d g e o f G o d n o r any k n o w l e d g e o f o u r o w n c o n sciousness, p r i o r to our engagement w i t h things i n the w o r l d w e inhabit. I t is o n l y by reflection o n its o w n act o f k n o w i n g things that the intellect comes t o k n o w the existence o f its cognitive acts and thus o f its being a subject, a centre o f consciousness The 'moderate realism' o f A r i s t o t l e and Aquinas is i n h a r m o n y w i t h c o m m o n sense, w h i c h is to say: our natural, spontaneous knowledge.. This
1
contemporary
philosophy, as
Garrigou-
agnosticism, w h i c h includes the neo-positivism of Carnap, Wittgenstein, 28
Here, too, belongs the p h e n o m -
enology o f Husserl, w h i c h holds that the object o f philosophy is the immediate datum o f experience. AH these philosophies are concerned, then, n o t w i t h being, reality but w i t h phenomena, 'appearances'. 2
e v o l u t i o n i s m , w h i c h , i n the wake of H e g e l , takes the f o r m o f idealism, represented by Gentile i n Italy, and by L e o n Brunschvicg i n France; and
the p r i n c i p l e o f n o n - c o n t r a d i c t i o n : the articulation o f o p p o s i t i o n between
w h e n g i v e n a twist towards the empirical, c o i n i n g o u t as the creative
being and n o t h i n g ' B e i n g is n o t n o t h i n g ' , we may say; 'one and the same tively considered, then, this is the p r i n c i p l e o f i d e n t i t y : ' I f a t h i n g is, i t is: i f i t
characterize
nalism o f H u m e and C o m t e rehashed.
to believe - rather, these are necessary laws of b e i n g , objective laws o f all
Posi-
that
Rougier, and of the group called the Vienna Circle, w h i c h is the n o m i -
to phenomena, merely experimental, as the neophytes seem to be i n c l i n e d
t h i n g , r e m a i n i n g such, cannot simultaneously b o t h be and n o t be'
Philosophies
Lagrange lists t h e m :
h a r m o n y appears most clearly i n the objective validity o f first principles,
R i s i n g i m m e d i a t e l y f r o m the idea o f being is the fir st p r i n c i p l e , w h i c h is
13
I I
This becomes m u c h easier to grasp w h e n w e come to the three p r i n c i p a l tendencies
w h i c h are laws, n o t o f the m i n d only, mere logical laws, n o r laws restricted
reality, o f all that is o r can be.
V A I I C A N
evolution o f Bergson. 3
the m o d e r n G e r m a n school - rather a m i x e d bag, i t has to be said v o l u n t a r i s m as i n M a x Scheler; natural philosophy i n D r i e s c h , w h o
is n o t , i t is n o t ' To this p r i n c i p l e o f n o n - c o n t r a d i c t i o n is subordinated the
(however) leans o n A r i s t o t l e ; and o n t o l o g y i n H a r t m a n n , w h o gives a
p r i n c i p l e o f sufficient reason: ' E v e r y t h i n g that is, has its raison d'être, i n itself,
Platonic t w i s t to Aristotle's metaphysics — accordingly, for a Thoinist
i f of itself i t exists; i n something else, i f o f itself i t does n o t exist'
like Garrigou-Lagrange, these philosophies are w o r t h engaging w i t h ,
These are the principles o f our natural intelligence, first manifested i n
precisely w h e r e they l i m p towards A r i s t o t l e and Plato
that spontaneous f o r m o f intelligence w h i c h we call c o m m o n sense, that is, the natural aptitude of intelligence, to judge things sanely — before we have been initiated into a certain philosophical
culture
Garrigou-Lagrange's map o f m o d e r n philosophy need n o t be accepted i n every detail Nonetheless, as a r o u g h guide, he is by no means completely at
E x p o s i t i o n of the principles o f o n t o l o g y takes up the greater part o f Garrigou-Lagranges b o o k I t cannot be said to be easy going. O n the c o n -
sea. O n the contrary, he had a m o r e i n f o r m e d and better-balanced picture than many philosophers, let alone Thomists, had at the time.
trary, i t seems, at least to an analytic philosopher's eye, all t o o m u c h like the exposition, h i g h l y abstract and syllogistic, o f a set o f quasi-Euclidean t h e o rems. The c o m m u n i c a t i o n o f metaphysical principles seems very m u c h l i k e
Theology without Thomistic
setting o u t the rules o f a game. F r o m the p o i n t o f v i e w o f a m o r e text-based way o f studying philosophy, metaphysics seems treated like a k i n d of m a t h ematics. O n the historical side, concepts seem to come f r o m nowhere, they have n o background or context O n e way to keep one's head up, however, is to keep r e m i n d i n g oneself that, f o r Garrigou-Lagrange, the abstract structure w h i c h he expounds is actually i n t e n d e d to seem perfectly natural, once we clear away the mistaken philosophical theories
w h i c h distort and
occlude our c o m m o n sense. H i s metaphysics, one may say, is intended to let
Philosophy
W h a t goes w r o n g w h e n Catholic theologians t u r n away f r o m metaphysics? L i p service is, o f course, p a i d to Thomas Aquinas, Garrigou-Lagrange says, sarcastically Catholic theologians have to pretend to be Thomists. Yet, he asks rhetorically, is one a Thomist by accepting the dogmas defined by the C h u r c h , w h i l e f o l l o w i n g Descartes o n the spiritual life — b y privatizing one's relationship w i t h God? O r w h i l e , w i t h H u m e , denying the p r i n c i p l e of
things appear to us as they w o u l d i f our minds were n o t c l o u d e d by p h i l o sophical theorizings 2 t i
L o u i s R o u g i e r ( 1 8 8 9 - 1 9 8 2 ) , t h e F r e n c h l i n k w i t h t h e V i e n n a C i r c l e , a sort o f l o g i c a l
e m p i r i c i s t , o r g a n i z e d t h e Paris I n t e r n a t i o n a l Congress o f S ci e n t i f i c P h i i o s o p h y
1935.
14
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
B E F O R E
I I
causality and hence the validity o f cosmological proofs f o r the existence
V A T I C A N
15
I I
Garrigou-Lagrange becomes extremely eloquent Are w e to suppose that the dogma o f the I n c a r n a t i o n affirms that Jesus is G o d , a statement o f fact -
of God? A h - w e m i g h t naively ask — are n o t the truths o f c o m m o n sense a s u f f i -
or a pious e x h o r t a t i o n , that we must act towards Jesus 'as i f he were God? Is
cient f o u n d a t i o n for Catholic philosophers and theologians? Indeed they
Christ really present i n the eucharist, o r do w e only act as i f he were so?
are, Garrigou-Lagrange replies, w a r m i n g to his theme - the p r o b l e m is that
Succumbing to the allurements o f pragmatism, he fears, w e forget h o w to
the truths of c o m m o n sense are t o o o f t e n overlaid b y m o d e r n philosophical
understand dogmas defined by the C h u r c h as true, immutable, and as con-
theorizings. The minds o f neophyte theologians, so he thinks, are so soaked
f o r m i n g to the extramental reality w h i c h they express. W h a t they express is
i n phenomenalism, idealism, positivism, pragmatism, and so o n , that, w i t h -
n o t o u r religious experience. As regards the dogma o f the Incarnation,
o u t serious engagement w i t h these philosophies, they r e m a i n under t h e i r
Garrigou-Lagrange asks, w i t h r o u g h h u m o u r , ' W h o can c l a i m to experience
spell, w h i c h means i n the end that they discount reason
the hypostatic u n i o n ? ' W e may experience, n o t the mystery itself, b u t its
H e t h e n goes o f f i n t o something o f a rant. W h e n theologians choose history o f doctrine as their specialism, and abandon metaphysics, w h i c h he seems to regard as the unavoidable effect, then relativism creeps i n t o the teaching o f d o c t r i n e Pope Pius X was r i g h t to h i g h l i g h t , i n many C a t h o l i c ' theologians, i n his day, a gaping v o i d : the lack o f philosophy N e a r l y f i f t y years later, i n the 1950s, so Garrigou-Lagrange thinks, the same v o i d lies gaping open
effects i n us - i f y o u like: ' T h e Spirit H i m s e l f g i v e t h testimony to o u r spirit that we are the sons of G o d ' (§1384). Thomas Aquinas w o u l d agree to that, no d o u b t a l l o w i n g that the Spirit evokes i n us a filial affection, w h i c h (if you like) y o u may say y o u 'experience' Yet even this 'experience', G a r r i g o u Lagrange says, deflatingly, w o u l d be difficult to distinguish f r o m
mere
sentimental affection Bemused by this pragmatist c o n c e p t i o n o f t r u t h , another theologian has
Recently, for example, Garrigou-Lagrange reports, one theologian has asserted that, w h i l e speculative
theology no d o u b t p r o d u c e d beautiful
claimed that theology is at b o t t o m a spirituality, w h i c h has f o u n d concepts adequate to its religious experience. This p o s i t i o n comes from the G e r m a n
systems i n the M i d d l e Ages, i t n o longer has a role: serious w o r k is n o w all
Romantic
i n positive theology - historical scholarship, that is to say - rather than i n
Here, however, as we shall see i n the next chapter, Garrigou-Lagrange is
Tübingen School, and especially f r o m Johann A d a m M ö h l e r
metaphysical system-building. A n o t h e r proposes t o p u t the treatise o n the
attacking his f o r m e r student M a r i e - D o m i n i q u e C h e n u
This is t h e claim
T r i n i t y before the de Deo uno, w h i c h i n any case he w o u l d cut d o w n to size.
that L h o m i s t theology w o u l d be the expression o f D o m i n i c a n spirituality,
As regards the relationship between nature and grace, another w o u l d r e t u r n
Scotism that o f Franciscan spirituality, M o l i n i s m that of lgnatian spirituality,
to w h a t he holds to be the true p o s i t i o n o f the Greek Fathers before the
and so o n These three schools of spirituality, i t w o u l d be said, are tolerated
t i m e o f Augustine - as i f the labours o f Aquinas, and seven centuries o f
i n the Catholic C h u r c h , and so the theologies, w h i c h are their conceptual
Thomists, were o f no value! For the likes o f Garrigou-Lagrange, there was
expressions, each being i n c o n f o r m i t y w i t h the particular religious experi-
no p o i n t i n studying earlier authors whose w o r k was absorbed i n t o , or r e n -
ence, w h i c h is its source, w o u l d all be equally 'true'. A t times, however,
dered redundant by, Aquinas's achievement. Pragmatism is a great t e m p t a t i o n : ' A doctrine according to w h i c h t r u t h is
Garrigou-Lagrange protests, these theologies contradict one another — what is to be said about this?
a relation, entirely i m m a n e n t to h u m a n experience, whereby k n o w l e d g e is
This 'spiritualization' o f theology, r e d u c i n g i t to a religious experience,
subordinated to activity, and the t r u t h o f a p r o p o s i t i o n consists i n its u t i l i t y
deprives i t o f all 'scientific' o b j e c t i v i t y This is the morass i n t o w h i c h we
and satisfactoriness'.
are l e d i f we abandon t h e n o t i o n o f t r u t h as c o n f o r m i t y w i t h
29
D o g m a becomes a n o r m , regulatory, a practical
objective
prescription: ' I n y o u r relations w i t h G o d , act as y o u do i n y o u r relations
reality, p r o p o s i n g rather to define t r u t h as c o n f o r m i t y w i t h
constantly
w i t h people'. D o g m a , that is t o say, w o u l d n o t be true by its c o n f o r m i n g to
developing experience, m o r a l and religious
transcendent d i v i n e reality, b u t b y its relation to the i n t e r n a l religious ex-
c o n c e p t i o n o f t r u t h as correspondence w i t h reality is t o unsettle a l l f o u n -
perience o f the person. ' T h e dogmas o f faith are t o be retained o n l y i n the
dations, n o t o n l y i n theology, i n metaphysics, b u t also i n the sciences, and
practical sense, i e : as preceptive norms o f action, but n o t as norms o f
i n f a i t h : ' T h e enthusiasm o f hope and charity, i f i t is not to remain a beauti-
b e l i e f w h i c h is a thesis that has been condemned by the C h u r c h (§1371).
ful dream of religious e m o t i o n , must rest o n a faith w h i c h is i n c o n f o r m i t y
To abandon the traditional
w i t h reality, n o t merely w i t h the exigencies o f o u r i n n e r life, or even w i t h Reality:
§1367
S u b s e q u e n t page references f o r q u o t a t i o n s are g i v e n i n t h e t e x t
our best intentions'.
16
B E F O R E
V A T I C A N
I I
Chapter Two
Back, t h e n , to w h e r e w e were before, so Garrigou-Lagrange counsels us. A c t i o n , practice, experience, can never be the first c r i t e r i o n o f w h a t is true. Rather, the first c r i t e r i o n must be ontological, that objective reality f r o m
MARIE-DOMINIQUE
w h i c h reason draws first principles The first act o f the intellect is to k n o w , n o t its o w n action, n o t the ego, n o t phenomena, b u t objective and i n t e l l i -
CHENU
gible being (§1398). Unless w o u l d - b e theologians free themselves o f the philosophies b y w h i c h Garrigou-Lagrange takes i t f o r granted they are captivated, t h e i r theology w i l l inevitably subvert true Catholic d o c t r i n e
Conclusion M u c h m o r e m i g h t be said, o f course Garrigou-Lagrange published many
W h i l e Garrigou-Lagrange w a n t e d h i m to r e m a i n i n R o m e , i n 1920, as his
books o n dogmatic theology and spirituality H i s exposition o f Thomistic
assistant at the A n g e l i c u m , the y o u n g C h e n u chose rather to r e t u r n to Le
philosophy o f being, one may concede, is so abstract as to be almost i m p o s -
Saulchoir, the French D o m i n i c a n college t h e n i n exile i n B e l g i u m .
sible f o r beginners nowadays to get into. W h a t he perhaps intended as
younger m a n w a n t e d to develop a radically different way o f reading Thomas
merely a supplementary historical sketch o f the types of philosophy i n
Aquinas f r o m the one inculcated at the A n g e l i c u m T h e conflict o f inter-
vogue w h e n he was w r i t i n g is a far m o r e accessible p o i n t o f e n t r y i n t o the
pretations w h i c h divided t h e m so b i t t e r l y soon emerged.
1
The
questions about t r u t h and reality, realism, idealism, phenomenalism, and so
M a r c e l - L e o n C h e n u was b o r n o n 7 January 1895 at Soisy-sur-Seine, and
o n , w h i c h any w o u l d - b e Catholic theologian still needs to sort out. I r o n i -
died i n Paris o n 11 February 1990. H i s parents, bakers near C o r b e i l , eventu-
cally, w h e n this inveterate adversary of the histórico-contextualist approach
ally r u n n i n g a m e t a l w o r k i n g business, were never fiee o f financial anxieties
considers the philosophical options adopted by philosophers i n his o w n day,
H i s maternal grandparents, state school teachers, especially his grand-
he becomes a m o d e l o f h o w to engage w i t h the philosophical issues about
m o t h e r , encouraged his aptitude f o r study As a 15-year-old, v i s i t i n g Le
being, t r u t h , and so o n , w h i c h may perhaps always remain o n the t h e o -
Saulchoir, he fell i n love w i t h w h a t he saw as 'a very beautiful l i t u r g y w i t h a
logian's agenda, but w h i c h , i n any case, haunt the theologies w e are n o w to
life of study and a c o m m u n i t y d i s c i p l i n e ' .
examine.
The next step is to consider h o w differently the t h o u g h t o f
Garrigou-Lagrange, already gone to R o m e . I n 1913, after some m o n t h s i n a
Thomas Aquinas was approached by Garrigou-Lagrange's p u p i l : M a r i e -
diocesan seminary, he was clothed as a D o m i n i c a n fr iar, receiving t h e name
Dominique Chenu.
M a r i e - D o m i n i q u e , according to the custom i n those days U n f i t f o r military
2
H e just missed
meeting
service, he was packed o f f to R o m e i n late 1914, w i t h others, w h e n the G e r m a n advance i n t o B e l g i u m led to the suspension o f teaching at Le Saulchoir
Thus C h e n u completed the w h o l e seven years of neoscholastic
philosophy and theology at the A n g e l i c u m . R e g i n a l d Garrigou-Lagrange supervised his doctorate dissertation. I n L a t i n , o f course, i t is an analysis of
1
D e s p i t e P o p e L e o X I I I s call t o F r e n c h C a t h o l i c s t o s u p p o r t t h e R e p u b l i c t h e y f a i l e d to d o
so l e a d i n g , especially u n d e r E m i l e C o m b e s , p r i m e m i n i s t e r 1 9 0 2 - 5 , t o a serious a t t e m p t t o destroy t h e p o w e r o f t h e C h u r c h a n d t o t h e e x i l e o f r e l i g i o u s orders 2
F o r details see C h r i s t o p h e F P o t w o r o w s k i Contemplation
Marie-Dominique
Chenu
and Incarnation:
The
Theology
oj
( M o n t r e a l a n d K i n g s t o n : M c G i l l - Q u e e n ' s U n i v e r s i t y Press 2 0 0 1 ) ,
w i t h b i b l i o g r a p h y l i s t i n g 1,396
items
18
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
19
C H E N U
w h a t Aquinas says about c o n t e m p l a t i o n , m o t i v a t e d , however, b y the desire
I n effect, C h e n u was d e n y i n g any need to master Thomistic philosophy
to challenge the assumption (then), allegedly, that spirituality is p r i m a r i l y t o
before being allowed to enter i n t o Aquinas's w o r k as a w h o l e O l d e r c o l -
do w i t h a person's soul and o v e r c o m i n g sin, rather than concerned
with
leagues at Le Saulchoir, as w e l l as Garrigou-Lagrange, were dismayed at
I n effect, this
w h a t seemed to t h e m neglect o f speculative theology i n favour o f ('mere')
reconstruction of Aquinas's account o f c o n t e m p l a t i o n was designed to
historical scholarship, the slippery slope to relativistic notions o f t r u t h and
retrieve a theocentric
thus to m o d e r n i s m C h e n u was undismayed. I n 1937 he issued a manifesto:
contemplative self-submission to the objectivity o f G o d
3
c o n c e p t i o n o f C h r i s t i a n spirituality over against
m o d e r n , at any rate late n i n e t e e n t h - c e n t u r y concentration o n the state o f
Une École de théologie: Le Saulchoir H e had just passed the S T M examination,
the individual's spiritual progress
the highest degree w i t h i n the D o m i n i c a n Order. H e had been appointed
A f t e r these years i n R o m e , w h i c h he f o u n d uncongenial, C h e n u was impatient to get back to Le Saulchoir.
H i s reluctance
to w o r k
with
Garrigou-Lagrange, however, suggests that he already had a different way o f e x p o u n d i n g Aquinas i n m i n d . Back at Le Saulchoir, his first course (to fellow D o m i n i c a n s l i t t l e younger than himself) was o n 'the patristic sources o f the t h o u g h t o f St Thomas'. T h i s was n o t unprecedented, and i n any case he was charged w i t h teaching the history o f d o c t r i n e , n o t w i t h any of the m a i n courses o n dogmatic and m o r a l theology These were, of course,
R e g e n t , head o f the college. A t 42 he was o n the b r i n k o f great things. The college itself had just been granted the r i g h t t o award p o n t i f i c a l degrees, i n addition to i n t e r n a l D o m i n i c a n qualifications The result of his manifesto, however, was a summons to R o m e i n 1938 to be interrogated b y a handful o f his f e l l o w D o m i n i c a n s , headed b y Garrigou-Lagrange. T h e y b u l l i e d h i m so severely that: T gave i n t o a sort o f psychological pressure, I let myself be intimidated. O n e o f t h e m - no d o u b t to pacify R o m a n i r r i t a t i o n s — asked m e to sign a series of t e n propositions I signed'.
taught by m o r e experienced professors, and t o o k the f o r m (well i n t o the
6
Clearly, as a glance at t h e m shows, i n their fabulous absurdity, the p r o p o -
1960s) o f l i n e - b y - l i n e exposition o f the Summa Theologies, w i t h reference to
sitions reveal the senior D o m i n i c a n s ' fear that Chenu's
the c o m m e n t a r y b y Cajetan b u t w i t h l i t t l e or no allusion to the sources o f
recreating the historical context meant that t r u t h was n o t 'absolute and
Aquinas's views, i n patristic o r other literature..
i m m u t a b l e ' ; that theology was o n l y an expression of religious experience
emphasis
on
I n t e n years, w h a t began as an ancillary course b y a j u n i o r professor
and n o t a 'true science'; and so on. I t may seem incredible that g r o w n men
entirely redirected the way o f reading Aquinas. I n 1936—7 C h e n u lectured
w o u l d come up w i t h the p r o p o s i t i o n that ' I t is glorious f o r the C h u r c h to
o n Bonaventure's Itinerarium Mentis in Deum:
have the system of Saint Thomas as t r u l y o r t h o d o x ' , and suchlike, and
obviously n o t o n l y relating
Aquinas to his greatest c o n t e m p o r a r y b u t also i m p l y i n g that, i n its o w n quite different way, the Summa
Theologies c o u l d , and should, be read as a
k i n d o f ' j o u r n e y o f the m i n d i n t o the d i v i n e m y s t e r y ' . Just as challengingly, 4
w e f i n d C h e n u l e c t u r i n g , i n 1938-9, o n 'Augustine and Denys: the t w o Platonisms o f St Thomas'.
5
The difference between the theologies o f Aquinas
and Bonaventure expressed a difference i n 'spiritualities'. The c o n t r i b u t i o n
6
T h e t e n p r o p o s i t i o n s C h e n u signed w e r e as f o l l o w s : 1 F o r m u l a : d o g m a t i c s e n u n c i a n t ver-
i t a t e m a b s o l u t a m et i m m u t a b i l e m 2 P r o p o s i t i o n e s vera: et certa;
sive i n p h i l o s o p h i a sive i n
t h e o l o g i a . firma; s u n t et n u l l o m o d o fragiles 3 Sacra L r a d i t i o novas veritates n o n creat. sed firm i t e r t e n e n d u m u t d e p o s i t u m revelationis sen c o m p l e x u m v e r i t a t u m d i v i n i t u s r e v e l a t a r u m , c l a u s u m fuisse m o r t e u l t i m i a p o s t o l i
4 Sacra T h e o l o g i a n o n est q u í d a m s p i r i t u a l i t a s qua;
o f Denys and Augustine was as significant as that o f A r i s t o t l e i n shaping
i n v e n i t i n s t r u m e n t a sua; e x p e r i e n c i a ; r e l i g i o s a ; ada;quata; sed est vera scientia, D e o
Aquinas's w o r k . I n these, and several other ways, Chenu's ancillary course
c e n t e s t u d i o acquisita, cujus p r i n c i p i a s u n t a r t i c u l i F i d e i et e t i a m o m n e s veritates revelata;
edged o u t the standard way of e x p o u n d i n g Aquinas F r o m the start he broke completely w i t h the style o f e x p o u n d i n g the T h o m i s t synthesis as practised b y Garr igou-Lagrange.
q u i b u s t h e o l o g u s f i d e d i v i n a saltern i n f b r m i , adhœret. 5 V a r i a systemata t h e o l o g i c a i n q u i b u s ab i n v i c e m d i s s e n t i u n t n o n s u n t s i m u l vera systema S. T h o m a ;
q u o a d ea
6 G l o r i o s u m est E c c l e s i a m habere
t a m q u a m valde o r t h o d o x u m , i e
7 Necesse est veritates t h e o l o g i c a s p e r S
benedi-
v e r i t a t i b u s F i d e valde
conforme.
S c r i p t u r a m et t r a d i t i o n e m d e m o n s t r a r e ,
e a r u m n a t u r a m et i n t i m a m r a t i o n e m p r i n c i p i i s et d o c t r i n a S. T h o m a ; i l l u s t r a t e 8 S
necnon Thomas,
etsi p r o p r i e t h e o l o g u s p r o p r i e e t i a m p h i l o s o p h u s f u i t ; p r o i n d e , p h i l o s o p h i a eius i n sua i n t e l l i 1
'De contemplatione
( A n g e l i c u m 1 9 2 0 ) , L a L h è s e m é d i t e d u P. M . - D . C h e n u ' , e d i t e d b y
C a r m e l o G i u s e p p e C o n t i c e l l o , Revue
des
Sciences Philosophiques
et Théologiques
75
(1991):
F o r t h e finest a c c o u n t a l o n g these lines: A N W i l l i a m s , ' M y s t i c a l T h e o l o g y R e d u x :
P a t t e r n o f A q u i n a s s Summa Theologies', i n Modem 5
Cf
Aquinas:
Fran O ' R o u r k e ,
Theologyi3
Lhe
9
Theologo
i n processu s c i e n t i f i c o
suo v a l d e n e c e s s a r i u m
( L o n d o n : S C M Press 2 0 0 3 ) : 2 4 7 - 7 9 .
est
metaphysicam
10 D e aliis s c r i p t o r i b u s et
d o c t o r i b u s p r o b a t i s s e r v a n d u m est m o d e r a m e n reverentiale i n m o d o l o q u e n d i et s c r i b e n d i , e t i a m s i i n q u i b u s d a m d e f e c t u m i n v e n i u n t u r T h e L a t i n needs n o t r a n s l a t i o n ; i t w o u l d s o u n d
(1997):53-74
A q u i n a s a n d P l a t o n i s m ' , i n Fergus K e r r O P (ed.)
On the Varieties ojInterpretation
absolutas
S. T h o m a ; a d h i b e r e et ad regulas dialéctica; d i l i g e n t e r attendere
363—422: extracts, w i t h c o m m e n t a r y 4
g i b i l i t a t e et v e r i t a t e n o n p e n d t t ab ejus t h e o l o g i a , nec e n u n c i a t veritates m e r e relativas sed
Contemplating
e v e n m o r e absurd i n E n g l i s h ; t h e t e x t is i n t h e h a n d , i t is said, o f M i c h a e l B r o w n e (see f a c s i m ile Une Ecole de théologie:
le Saulchoir (Paris: C e r f 1 9 8 5 ) : 35)
20
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
badger C h e n u i n t o p u t t i n g his signature to such p o p p y c o c k - b u t that is
' o p t i m i s m ' o f the c o n s t i t u t i o n Gaudium
symptomatic o f the theological pathology o f those days.
C h u r c h and the M o d e r n W o r l d ' .
21
C H E N U
et Spes, the d o c u m e n t ©n 'The
Chenu's critics, besides Garrigou-Lagrange, i n c l u d e d M a r i a n o C o r d o v a n i
I n the aftermath, C h e n u was m o r e dismayed by the failure to i m p l e m e n t
(1883-1950), t h e n recently a p p o i n t e d Master o f the Sacred Palace, personal
the reforms that he expected, rather than by the surrender to the attractions
theologian to the pope; and M i c h a e l B r o w n e (1887-1971), R e c t o r of the
o f secularism that distressed many others i n his generation H e d i e d i n Paris
A n g e l i c u m and future Master o f the D o m i n i c a n O r d e r and a leader o f
o n 11 February 1990, receiving a splendid funeral i n N o t r e - D a m e , w i t h
the ultramontanist m i n o r i t y at Vatican I I
many bishops i n attendance.
These three were f o r m i d a b l e
theologians, d e t e r m i n e d enemies o f any tendency i n Catholic theology that c o u l d be accused o f m o d e r n i s m , and very capable exponents o f the A r i s t o t e l i a n - T h o m i s t synthesis. T h e i r views were certainly representative o f
Baroque Scholasticism
the m a j o r i t y o f Chenu's f e l l o w D o m i n i c a n s at the t i m e I n 1942, i n G e r m a n - o c c u p i e d Paris, C h e n u heard o n the radio that his
C h e n u , then, c o m p l e t e d the f u l l seven years o f mandatory Thomistic p h i l -
Thomas
osophy and theology at one o f the leading institutions i n R o m e . T h e worst
Philippe, f o r m e r l y a colleague at Le Saulchoir b u t teaching i n R o m e since
excesses o f the a n t i - m o d e r n i s t campaign were curbed w h e n Pius X died
1936, ar rived w i t h a u t h o r i t y f r o m the Master of the O r d e r to deprive C h e n u
and was succeeded i n September 1914 by Benedict X V
o f his post as R e g e n t at Le Saulchoir (back i n France, i n the south-east
recently retired f r o m his chair at the Gregorian University, was b y far the
suburbs of Paris, since 1938), d e n o u n c i n g h i m explicitly as a 'modernist', f o r
most authoritative theological presence i n t o w n
playing d o w n the role o f reason i n d o i n g theology, and advocating the study
O a t h and the T w e n t y - f o u r T h o m i s t i c Theses had recently been imposed (in
little manifesto was n o w o n the I n d e x o f P r o h i b i t e d B o o k s .
7
o f T u b i n g e n School theologians, i n particular o f Johann A d a m M o h l e r
8
C h e n u never again taught at Te Saulchoir Friends got h i m a post at the E c o l e des Hautes Etudes i n Paris, w h i c h o n l y c o n f i r m e d the j u d g e m e n t that, w h i l e perhaps suited to historical research, he was n o t a reliable e x p o nent o f Aquinas B y t h e n , however, as a friar-preacher, he was i n v o l v e d w i t h the beginnings o f the w o r k e r - p r i e s t m o v e m e n t , and its attempt to evangelize the anti-clerical i n d u s t r i a l suburbs o f Paris. Eventually, i n 1953, C h e n u was a m o n g the French D o m i n i c a n s disciplined by the Master o f t h e i r O r d e r (Suarez), supposedly to save t h e m f r o m worse treatment by the Vatican.
9
1 1
1 0
Louis B i l l o t sj,
The Anti-modernist
1910 and 1914 respectively). Years later, C h e n u w o u l d a d m i t to r e m a i n i n g marked by the T w e n t y - f o u r Theses. The i m p o s i t i o n o f the Theses o n all doctorate candidates he saw as one o f the w o r s t abuses o f papal authority, distorting the practice o f Catholic theology P r i m a r i l y a historian, a n d never a metaphysician, he w o u l d always have developed a different reading of Thomas Aquinas f r o m that elaborated by Garrigou-Lagrange His approach, one may say, a little summarily, was very m u c h a reaction against the project (as i t seemed to h i m ) o f extracting metaphysical theorems f r o m Aquinas's w o r k , t a k i n g t h e m o u t o f theological as w e l l as historical context, creating (as he used to say) a 'sacred metaphysics' C h e n u used to say that he p r o f i t e d f r o m Garrigou-Lagrange's
N e v e r an official 'expert' at Vatican I I , b u t employed as adviser to French-
lectures
speaking A f r i c a n bishops, C h e n u instigated the Message to the W o r l d
However, he regarded h i m as a d i v i d e d m i n d : a master o f spirituality, versed
(20 O c t o b e r 1962), o n the grounds that the C o u n c i l should display f r o m
particularly i n St John o f the Cross, the Spanish Carmelite mystic, and yet an
the outset that the C h u r c h is concerned n o t o n l y w i t h herself b u t p r i n c i -
inflexible Aristotelian i n philosophy, d e t e r m i n e d to keep spirituality and
pally w i t h the destiny o f the w o r l d . H e had a g o o d deal to do w i t h the 1 0
G i a c o m o D e l i a C h i e s a (1854—1922), a p a t r i c i a n a n d career d i p l o m a t was said t o have
f o u n d a secret file d e n o u n c i n g his o w n ' m o d e r n i s t ' heresies w h e n h e sat d o w n at t h e papal 7
C r e a t e d b y t h e C o n g r e g a t i o n o f t h e i n q u i s i t i o n i n 1557 t o c o n t r o l l i t e r a t u r e c o n t r a r y t o
f a i t h o r m o r a l s ; a b a n d o n e d i n 1966 8
desk 1 1
T h o m a s P h i l i p p e ( 1 9 0 5 - 9 3 ) later b e c a m e c h a p l a i n t o a n i n s t i t u t i o n f o r m e n w i t h d i s a b i l i -
A c c o r d i n g t o C h e n u , B i l l o t s t h e o l o g y is i d e o l o g y ; c o m p l e t e l y i g n o r a n t a n d careless o f the
historicity o f the Christian economy
w i t h n o interest i n b i b l i c a l sources, i n d i f f e r e n t t o the
ties, w h i c h s u b s e q u e n t l y i n s p i r e d Jean V a n i e r t o f o u n d L ' A r c h e , a n i n t e r n a t i o n a l n e t w o r k o f
pastoral e x p e r i e n c e o f t h e C h u r c h a n d o f t h e C h r i s t i a n p e o p l e :
such communities..
entirely defined by conceptual and juridical authority, w i t h no methodological guidance from
9
F o r this s h a m e f u l s t o r y see F r a n ç o i s L e p r i e u r Quand Rome condamne. Dominicains
ouvriers (Paris: P i o n / C e r f
1989)
et prêtres-
t h e m y s t e r y w h i c h is nevertheless its o b j e c t ' , see Jacques Duquesne théologien
en liberté. (Paris: C e n t u r i o n 1 9 7 5 ) : 3 1 .
a t h e o l o g y o f t h e faith interroge le Pére Chenu:
Un
22
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
speculative theology completely separate. For C h e n u , b y contrast, Catholic Christian theology c o u l d n o t be practised except w i t h continuous reference
23
C H E N U
the objectivity o f speculative theology as a quasi-scientific discipline i n favour (as they feared) o f a morass o f piety, subjective experience and fideism.
to the historical economy of the mystery o f G o d incarnate - w h i c h meant, as a matter o f course, that theological activity was g r o u n d e d i n the liturgical
L e S a u l c h o i r : A S c h o o l of T h e o l o g y ?
life and contemplative asceticism w i t h w h i c h he had fallen i n love as a youngster. C h e n u was n o m o r e interested than Garrigou-Lagrange was i n historical scholarship f o r its o w n sake (whatever that m i g h t be) H e saw the
To w h a t extent Le Saulchoir ever was, even i n 1937, 'une école', as i f all the
revitalization o f Catholic study o f Scripture by the application o f the histor-
D o m i n i c a n s o n the teaching staff at the t i m e had a single v i s i o n , is dis-
ical critical methods o f biblical scholars, his f e l l o w D o m i n i c a n Marie-Joseph
putable Some o f his colleagues, at least, were i n f u r i a t e d by Chenu's magis-
Lagrange i n p a r t i c u l a r .
terial exposition of w h a t they stood for, collectively
12
The same approach, w i t h appropriate differences,
w o u l d open up the theology o f the medievals and especially that o f Aquinas,
Moreover, i n retrospect, Une école de théologie was needlessly polemical.
so C h e n u believed, far m o r e f r u i t f u l l y than neoscholastic T h o m i s m c o u l d
For example, C h e n u d e r i d e d the c u r r i c u l a at seminaries and colleges (no
ever achieve. Aquinas s v i s i o n o f the Christian revelation o f G o d was, i n a
d o u b t i n c l u d i n g the A n g e l i c u m ) : neoscholastic philosophy and theology
way, incarnate i n his w r i t i n g . To ignore the historical context, the genesis
textbooks were pervaded b y ' W o l f f i a n rationalism' H e peppered his text
and texture, o f this w r i t i n g was to miss the vision
w i t h insults N a t u r a l theology as practised i n Catholic institutions had no
C h e n u w r o t e as follows:
m o r e religious character than eighteenth-century D e i s m The Augustfnian
Those who enclose themselves i n a scholastic I h o m i s m hardened by generations of textbooks and manuals (and marginalized by the intrusion of a massive dose of Baroque scholasticism) oblige themselves thereby to summary condemnations o f positions o f which they are largely ignorant. This would certainiy not be the path for disciples of Thomas Aquinas. A n d less helpful is the way o f those who, colluding strangely w i t h anti-modernism, hand the memory of the medieval doctor over to a positivist intellectualism, keeping for themselves a I h o m i s m which is only a paragon of their own pseudoreligious integrist position But this exploitation of Thomism (which some naively view to be salutary) cannot hide the real intentions of others, penetrated w i t h the spirit o f Thomas and w i t h the highest requirements of scientific or theological work They meet honesdy the problems legitimately posed by the philosophy of religion, biblical exegesis, and the history of dogma Illumined by the experience of their teacher they know how to discern in new terrain the relationships o f reason and faith Precisely this is the intellectual regime o f Catholicism.
Aquinas's theology Catholic theology needed to be disinfected o f 'baroque
Chenu's c o n t r i b u t i o n is all there, already, i n 1931. For Garrigou-Lagrange,
j e c t e d t h e C h u r c h t o t h e state: o n e o f t h e spectres h a u n t i n g t h e V a t i c a n at V a t i c a n I - q u i t e an
however, and many w h o shared his view, Chenu's project risked forfeiting
arcane i n s u l t !
sap and the D i o n y s i a n mysticism had been allowed to leak away f r o m Scholasticism': Joseph I I ' .
1 4
'the philosophy o f clerical functionaries at the c o u r t o f
T h e ' T h o m i s t o r t h o d o x y ' o f Cardinal Zigliara, the greatest
o f the n i n e t e e n t h - c e n t u r y D o m i n i c a n Thomists i n R o m e , was ' c o n t a m i nated b y W o l f f i a n i s m ' ; i t suppresses the 'Platonic' interpretation o f (say) Lepidi
1 5
C h e n u w o u l d prefer Pierre Rousselot's b o o k , L'lntellectualisme
Saint Thomas, 'despite its faults'
1 6
de
Esoteric as these boutades n o w sound, they
c o u l d n o t b u t anger most Catholic theologians at the time, G a r r i g o u Lagrange above all. I n short, so Chenu's charge ran, neoscholastics paid n o attention to 'the problems o f existence, action, the i n d i v i d u a l , b e c o m i n g , and t i m e ' , preferr i n g 'a philosophy of essences, i n w h i c h w h a t counts is the n o n - c o n t i n g e n t , the universal, ideal and i m m u t a b l e relations - fine matters for definitions'
13
1 4
1 5
J o s e p h I I (1 7 4 1 - 9 0 ) H a b s b u r g E m p e r o r , a n d leader o f t h e C a t h o l i c E n l i g h t e n m e n t , sub-
Tomasso M a r i a Z i g l i a r a O P ( 1 8 3 3 - 9 3 ) t a u g h t i n R o m e f r o m 1 8 7 0 t o 1893 a n d was t h e
c h i e f e x p o n e n t o f A r i s t o t e l i a n I h o m i s m A l b e r t o L e p i d i O P ( 1 8 3 8 - 1 9 2 5 ) , b y contrast, w h o 1 2
Marie-Joseph
Lagrange ( 1 8 5 5 - 1 9 3 8 ) f o u n d e d a centre o f b i b l i c a l studies i n Jerusalem i n
1 8 9 0 a n d was t h e greatest C a t h o l i c b i b l i c a l scholar A t t a c k e d b y colleagues f o r his s u p p o r t o f m o d e r n i s m , h e t u r n e d f r o m O l d t o N e w Testament studies, less liable (then) t o raise suspicions 1 3
' L e sens et les l e ç o n s d ' u n e crise religieuse'. La Vie intellectuelle
T h o m a s F O ' M e a r a OP. Thomas Aquinas o f N o t r e D a m e Press 1999:
182
Theologian
(Notre Dame
13 ( 1 9 3 1 ) : 3 8 0 translated i n I N , and L o n d o n : University
t a u g h t i n France and B e l g i u m , stressed t h e A u g u s t i n i a n s t r a n d i n A q u i n a s Z i g l i a r a a n d L e p i d i represented r a d i c a l l y d i v e r g e n t t r a d i t i o n s e v e n w i t h i n t h e D o m i n i c a n O r d e r 1 6
C h e n u , a D o m i n i c a n , r e c o m m e n d i n g a b o o k b y a Jesuit, was o f c o u r s e b e i n g p r o v o c a t i v e .
P i e r r e R o u s s e l o t Sj ( 1 8 7 8 - 1 9 1 5 ) r e d i s c o v e r e d a p a r t i c i p a t i o n i s t p h i l o s o p h y o f k n o w l e d g e and l o v e i n t h e w o r k o f A q u i n a s , m a k i n g A r i s t o t e l i a n T h o m i s m i r r e l e v a n t ; see his 1 9 0 8 thesis translated as The Intellectualism
of St Thomas ( L o n d o n : Sheed a n d W a r d 1935)
Sorbonne
24
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
Provocatively, as he must have realized, the second chapter of Chenu's
25
C H E N U
and i n the contemplation, which, goal o f both, guarantees the fervour, the method, the purity, and the freedom o f their s p i r i t
manifesto begins w i t h a q u o t a t i o n f r o m a letter f r o m George Tyrrell {whose
18
name he misspelled) to F r i e d r i c h v o n H u g e l w r i t t e n i n 1904, i n w h i c h he remarks that i t is not o n this or that article o f the Creed that they differ f r o m
This is, obviously, exactly w h a t Garrigou-Lagrange rejected. For a theo-
their adversaries, they differ over the w o r d credo, o n the m e a n i n g o f the
logian, C h e n u goes o n , c o n t e m p l a t i o n is n o t a practice i n w h i c h he may
w o r d ' t r u e ' as applied to dogma. This remark C h e n u takes to show that
engage f r o m t i m e to t i m e , 'a burst o f fervour, beyond his studying, as i f an
there c o u l d be n o d o u b t about 'the intellectual and religious crisis that cut
escape f r o m its object and its m e t h o d ' . Rather, c o n t e m p l a t i o n is the theo-
across Christianity at that t i m e ' Nevertheless, he i m m e d i a t e l y says, m u c h
logian's everyday environment, w i t h o u t w h i c h theology w o u l d be arid
has been achieved, i n Catholic scholarship. H e reels o f f the famous names:
and pointless. Garrigou-Lagrange w o u l d n o t have dissented. B e h i n d what
Duchesne, B a t i f f o l , Lagrange, Mercier, and B l o n d e l — 'the fruits o f this
C h e n u is saying, however, there lies a longstanding dispute about h o w to
extremely fecund a c t i v i t y presided over b y Pope Leo X I I I '
A l l i n all, as
divide up the day: does a theologian spend an h o u r on his knees w i t h o u t a
this litany was meant to demonstrate, there was a h a l f - c e n t u r y o f Catholic
b o o k o f any k i n d and t h e n go to the library to study or to the aula to
scholarship to celebrate (always a booster, C h e n u , never a knocker) - w h a t -
lecture; or is the hour's m e d i t a t i o n dependent o n a text and the research and
ever 'controversies and incidents' there had been.
teaching always contemplatively practised? C h e n u , i t seemed to his critics,
1 7
Interestingly C h e n u makes n o attempt to discuss the concept o f t r u t h , w h i c h Tyrrell assumes that he and v o n H u g e l share, over against the concept
failed to make the proper distinction between study and prayer, and was thus, Unsurprisingly liable to confuse theology and spirituality
held by their critics Tyrrell is m a k i n g the crucial p o i n t that, philosophically,
I n the chapter o n philosophy C h e n u raises the perennially d i f f i c u l t ques-
his conception o f t r u t h is quite different f r o m that i n neoscholastic theology
t i o n o f the status o f philosophy w i t h i n Christianity This is a practical as well
C h e n u does n o t endorse Tyrell's remark, n o r o n the other h a n d does he
as a theoretical question. As standard seminary pedagogy required, should
seem to see any reason to question it.
philosophical studies precede entry i n t o theology? Neoscholastic apologetics,
The message o f Chenu's manifesto lies, most provocatively, i n the layout: the chapter o n philosophy comes after the one o n theology
the c r o w n o f the philosophy course, mistakenly regarded as 'traditional',
I n effect,
completely misrepresents the relationship between reason and faith, 'as i f i t
There is no
was a matter o f t w o worlds outside one another, for w h i c h happy concor-
need to be able to defend the T w e n t y - f o u r Theses before one is allowed to
dances had to be f o u n d ' . N o d o u b t this seemed to make sense, as a reaction
pass i n t o theological studies.
reconstruct
to the deism o f the Enlightenment. B u t i t is a mistake: ' A Christian doing
Aquinas's historical context than to master the metaphysical theorems that
philosophy does n o t cease to be a Christian; a Christian philosopher does not
supposedly he at the basis o f his theology
cease to be a p h i l o s o p h e r ' .
Thomas Aquinas is to be read as a theologian f r o m the outset I t is far m o r e i m p o r t a n t to
T h e key passage runs as follows:
19
C h e n u is sceptical about the n o t i o n o f a 'perennial philosophy'
The
phrase itself — philosophic! perennis — was invented by a certain A. Steuchus, Theological systems are only the expression of spiritualities . The greatness and the truth o f Bonaventuran or Scotist Augustinianism are entirely i n the spiritual experience of Saint Francis which became the soul i n his sons; the grandeur and the truth of Molinism are i n the spiritual experience of Saint Ignatius's Exercises A theology worthy o f the name is a spirituality, which finds the rational instruments adequate to its religious experience It is not the luck of history that Saint Thomas entered the Order o f Saint Dominic; and it is not by some desultory grace that the Order of Saint Dominic received Saint Thomas Aquinas The institution and the doctrine are closely allied w i t h one another, in the inspiration that carried the one and the other into a new age,
C h e n u i n f o r m s us, i n a characteristic
display o f self-mocking erudition—
'this Renaissance philosopher w h o wanted, w i t h this phrase, to reconcile the Paduan theism w i t h medieval scholasticism'
2 0
The p r o b l e m w i t h the
phrase, however, is that i t suggests that philosophy is a set of 'characterless and shapeless principles', énoncés dépersonnalisés et avachis, the least c o m m o n denominator, so to speak, o f philosophical projects w h i c h (however) actually
1 K
Ibid:
1 9
I b i d : 153
148-9
2 0
A g o s t i n o S t e u c o ( 1 4 9 6 - 1 5 4 9 ) was a C a n o n R e g u l a r o f the L a t e r a n and r a n t h e Vatican
L i b r a r y H i s w o r k s i n c l u d e Philosophia
Perennis ( w r i t t e n 1540) w h i c h sees all r e l i g i o n s as m a n i -
festations o f a p e r e n n i a l p h i l o s o p h y that is o n e a n d e t e r n a l ; t h e phrase was t o b e p i c k e d up b y 1 7
Le Saulchoir' Une. école de théologie
(Paris: C e r f 1 9 3 7 ) : 115
Leibniz
26
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
differ considerably, ' i n i n t u i t i o n and i n systematization'
I n brief,
neo-
C H E N U
27
t h e o r y o f knowledge, is the object o f k n o w l e d g e as i t is outside th'e knower
scholastic philosophy — 'under the patronage o f L e i b n i z ' — adopted a false
i n its proper existence Yet, as he goes o n to say, there is n o k n o w l e d g e of
'ideal of i n t e l l i g i b i l i t y '
the reality except t h r o u g h w h a t there is of this reality i n the knower. A n a l o -
2 1
gously, the d i v i n e reality obviously exists independently o f us; but o u r minds receive i t i n o u r o w n way, that is to say by c o m b i n i n g and d i v i d i n g , by way (then) o f propositions
C h e n u on T h o m a s Aquinas on Faith
As a historian C h e n u delightedly re-creates the controversy, i d e n t i f y i n g C h e n u had ambitious plans to study Thomas Aquinas i n historical context
the disputants w h o m Aquinas never names. Clearly, however, his m o t i v a t i o n
i n such a way as to cast l i g h t o n current theological matters. Perhaps the
is to demonstrate a m e t h o d o f reading Aquinas w h i c h , far f r o m l o s i n g spec-
outbreak o f w a r i n 1939 w o u l d have i n t e r r u p t e d h i m anyway, b u t ecclesias-
ulative theology i n the dust o f historical research, or (worse) i n a morass of
tical sanctions d i d n o t help. H i s first p u b l i c a t i o n , back i n 1923, shows the
relativism, actually enables Aquinas's solution o f the t h i r t e e n t h - c e n t u r y
k i n d of w o r k he wanted to do..
dispute to bear o n m o d e r n disputes.. We do n o t have t o choose between
I n this article C h e n u offers a reading o f Aquinas's consideration i n his Summa Theologies o f the object o f f a i t h .
2 2
T h e question is w h e t h e r the object
saying that o u r faith is i n propositions and saying that i t is i n the reality of the divine W o r d I n the 1920s, as now, there were disputes over w h e t h e r our
i n the f o r m o f a
minds are c o n f i n e d w i t h i n language or capable o f transcending directly to
proposition, o r first t r u t h itself, Veritas prima, that is to say: G o d , w h o is i n n o
reality Catholics believed i n propositions w h i l e Protestants had f a i t h i n a
way composed of parts Is faith i n propositions or i n God?
person, so i t was often claimed For C h e n u , Aquinas dissolved this putative
o f faith is something composite, per modum enuntiabilis,
A c c o r d i n g to C h e n u , the interest o f this has been missed, because c o m -
d i l e m m a l o n g ago, i n a paradigmatic way H e r e , less t h a n three years since
I f we re-create the
leaving R o m e , C h e n u was demonstrating a way o f studying the text o f
controversy we can see the permanent importance o f the p o s i t i o n Aquinas
Aquinas quite different (he does n o t need to say) f r o m the way practised by
takes The controversy originates i n the question of the i d e n t i t y o f faith
Garrigou-Lagrange
between O l d and N e w Testaments: the i m m u t a b i l i t y of faith t h r o u g h its
adds, dreamed o f by D e n i f l e
mentators
d i d n o t place i t i n historical context
This is the k i n d o f historical theology, Chenu cheekily 2 3
development. For Aquinas, there was c o n t i n u i t y between C h r i s t i a n and Jewish faith
Some o f his predecessors h e l d that, since faith is a k i n d o f
knowledge, i t must have propositions as its object. H e is happy to agree,
I n t r o d u c t i o n to T h o m a s A q u i n a s
since this allows h i m to insist o n the h u m a n conditions of the act of faith: 'the way o f k n o w i n g t r u t h proper to the h u m a n m i n d is by an act o f c o m b i n i n g and separating'
For C h e n u , this should legitimate o u r m o d e r n
interest i n the psychological conditions o f faith
I t should also r e m i n d
writers about spirituality — 'against all i l l u m i n i s m ' — that even the gifts o f the H o l y Spirit do n o t exempt the C h r i s t i a n f r o m the regime o f gradual, u n e n d i n g and expanding enlightenment. Faith does n o t s h o r t - c i r c u i t i n t e l ligence; o n the contrary, i t incarnates the divine t r u t h i n the very substance o f our minds
Bizarrely i t required some ecclesiastical m a n o e u v r i n g for C h e n u to be allowed to publish his i n t r o d u c t i o n to the study o f Thomas Aquinas
2 4
' H i g h e r authorities' sought to b l o c k i t since, after all, his little manifesto remained o n the Index o f P r o h i b i t e d Books.. C h e n u contends, i n w h a t remains one o f the best i n t r o d u c t i o n s , half a century later, that we cannot understand Aquinas w i t h o u t detailed study o f the histor ical context to w h i c h he belonged, and of the histor ical conditions under w h i c h he w o r k e d : the D o m i n i c a n Order, the University o f Paris, the
However, others held that the object o f faith was G o d , absolutely
They
academic institutions and literary f o r m s of the day, the legacy o f Augustine,
are o f course correct, so Aquinas argues: the reality k n o w n , according to his 2 i
2 1
U C h e n u , Le Sauichoir.
2 2
' C o n t r i b u t i o n à l ' h i s t o i r e d u traité de la f o i C o m m e n t a i r e h i s t o r i q u e de H a I l a e , q. 1 , a 2'
Mélanges
154-5
thomistes (Le S a u l c h o i r : K a i n . 1 9 2 3 ) : 1 2 3 - 4 0 ; r e p r i n t e d i n C h e n u , La Parole de Dieu
La Foi dans l'intelligence (Paris: C e r f T 9 6 4 ) : 31—50
H e i n r i c h Seuse D e n i f l e O P (1844—1905), p a t h - b r e a k i n g m e d i e v a l i s t ( t h o u g h h e predates
t h e C a t h o l i c a p p r e c i a t i o n o f L u t h e r ) , was t h e greatest D o m i n i c a n h i s t o r i a n o f t h e d a y î.
2 4
Introduction
a I'etude de S. 'Tltomai d'Aquin
(Paris: V r i n 1950. s e c o n d e d i t i o n 1 9 5 4 ) , trans-
l a t e d b y A - M L a n d r y a n d D H u g h e s as Towards Understanding
Saint Tltomas w i t h a u t h o r i z e d
c o r r e c t i o n s a n d b i b l i o g r a p h i c a l a d d i t i o n s ( C h i c a g o : H e n r y R e g n e r y 1964).
28
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
C H E N U
29
Denys, and the neoplatonic t r a d i t i o n , and so o n , as w e l l as Aquinas's critical
generally o m i t t e d i n expositions i n class of the doctrine C h e n u invites us to
engagement w i t h the recently discovered w o r k s o f Aristotle. H e highlights
notice h o w considering r e l i g i o n , d e v o t i o n and piety, and so o n , i n the
the diversity o f Aquinas's w o r k : commentaries o n A r i s t o t l e , o n Scripture,
context o f the m o r a l v i r t u e o f justice, perhaps points o u r conception o f spir-
disputations, m o r e than one summa, and so o n , each genre w i t h its o w n
ituality i n an unusual direction.
logic and relevance f o r spirituality T h o u g h t and text, expression and t r u t h ,
I n short, i n a list o f examples, C h e n u opens up a quite different approach
go together. Above all, however, Aquinas w o r k e d his thoughts o u t , most
to reading the Summa
Theologies f r o m the one inculcated by the lecture
characteristically, i n the classical f o r m o f the quœstio: considering every issue
courses and textbooks
supposedly composed
as raising questions. I t was just n o t the same t h o u g h t , C h e n u means, w h e n
Failure to allow f o r the context w h i c h he t o o k f o r granted — the Christian
Aquinas's solution to the question is reformulated as a 'thesis', as i f the
mystery, liturgically p e r f o r m e d , l i v e d i n disciplined c o n t e m p l a t i o n — leaves
objections that he considers to his v i e w c o u l d be left aside
the Summa Theologies as arid an exercise as most seminarians f o u n d i t Far
C h e n u 's was the first major effort to h i g h l i g h t the dramatic history, so to speak, w i t h i n w h i c h Aquinas's w o r k c o u l d disclose its riches
The
Summa
Theologies c o u l d no longer be treated, credibly, as a self-standing system t r a n scending all history and t i m e O n the c o n t r a r y like any classic, w e may say, i t
ad mentem Sancti
Thomcs.
f r o m reducing the rigorously intellectual achievement o f the Summa, Chenu was o u t to demonstrate that w e miss the achievement altogether unless we get to k n o w the m i n d the fruits o f whose c o n t e m p l a t i o n are set d o w n — incarnated, so to speak - i n the texts w h i c h w e have i n h e r i t e d
is precisely as b e l o n g i n g to the setting i n w h i c h i t is composed that i t c o n -
For all the importance of Aristotle, C h e n u insists, Aquinas should not be
tinues to disclose h o w p e r m a n e n t l y vital and valuable i t is We need n o t fear
read as i f he repudiated his inheritance f r o m Augustine. T h o u g h references to
that, the deeper we get i n t o the genesis and c o m p o s i t i o n o f a text, the m o r e
the platonici are usually critical, this should n o t occlude h o w m u c h he takes
slippery w i l l be the slope to relativism - just the opposite.. ' T h e t r u t h is n o
f o r granted f r o m the neo-Platonic tradition H e cites Denys as m u c h as A r i s -
less true for being inscribed i n t i m e ' .
totle We need to remember the t w e l f t h - c e n t u r y Renaissance, the presence
2 5
C h e n u combats the t h e n standard division of labour i n e x p o u n d i n g the Summa Theologies Far f r o m reflecting a decision to complete w h a t may be
o f lslamic culture, the evangelism o f the Friar s, and m u c h else that students of Thomas Aquinas n o w regard as an essential part of understanding his w o r k
demonstrated about G o d by reason before considering w h a t may be said
I t is salutary to remember that the approach w h i c h C h e n u pioneered 50
solely i n v i r t u e o f revelation, the fact that Aquinas deals w i t h the questions
years ago was t h e n regarded as a threat to the standard neoscholastic exposi-
de Deo uno and then w i t h those de Deo trino, 'results f r o m an o p t i o n charac-
t i o n o f T h o m i s m and thus to the maintenance o f o r t h o d o x y i n Catholic
teristic of L a t i n theology, w h i c h implies a spiritual itinerary towards the
theology
G o d of revelation'.
26
H o w e v e r pervaded w i t h metaphysics (he admits), the
questions de Deo uno deal w i t h the G o d of the B o o k o f Genesis, n o t the god o f Aristotle's Physics: the G o d o f A b r a h a m , Isaac and Jacob, w h o points us
Wolffianism at V a t i c a n I I
towards Christ. We have to retain the religious character o f this text, C h e n u insists, never reducing i t to a 'deist' theodicy H e refers us to a classic (though
In 1973, reflecting o n w h a t was achieved at Vatican I I , Chenu r e t u r n e d to
neglected) article by his colleague R e n é M o t t e .
the charge that neoscholastic theology was pervaded b y ' W o l f f i a n i s m ' The
2 7
T h e l i n k between the questions o n G o d and the theology o f creation,
unexpected rejection b y the m a j o r i t y of the bishops, i n N o v e m b e r 1962, o f
thus between the d i v i n e mystery and the w o r l d o f space and t i m e , is made
draft texts i n w h i c h he detected signs of ' W o l f f i a n metaphysics', was the final
by the key question o n the 'missions' o f the Son and o f the Spirit (Summa
defeat o f the neoscholastic T h o m i s m to w h i c h he was subjected i n R o m e i n
Theologice 1.43)
his y o u t h O n c e and f o r all, the spirit o f eighteenth-century rationalism was
T h r o u g h o u t the first part of the Summa, Aquinas keeps
i n c o r p o r a t i n g biblical material about creation — w h i c h , C h e n u notes, was
expelled f r o m Catholic t h e o l o g y
2 8
This was an irreversible shift i n theo-
logical sensibility, w i t h immensely i m p o r t a n t implications, however l o n g i t m i g h t take to w o r k i t all o u t 2 5
Introduction
à l'étude
de S. Thomas d'Aquin:
6, m y t r a n s l a t i o n
2 6
I b i d : 275
2 7
R A M o t t e , ' T h é o d i c é e et t h é o l o g i e c h e z S T h o m a s d ' A q u i n , Revue
sophiques et Théologiques
2 1 ( 1 9 3 7 ) : 5—26
des Sciences
Philo-
2 i î
M . - D . C h e n u , V é r i t é évangélique et métaphysique w o l f i e n n e à Vatican I S , Revue des Sciences
Philosophiques
et Ihéologiques
5'7 ( 1 9 7 3 ) : 632—40
30
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
I t is n o t clear h o w m u c h o f the prolific w o r k s o f the G e r m a n Lutheran theologian C h r i s t i a n W o l f f (1679-1754) C h e n u ever read. N o d o u b t he k n e w that W o l f f w a n t e d to g r o u n d theological truths o n evidence o f quasimathematical certitude
N o t o r i o u s l y , W o l f f s Pietist L u t h e r a n colleagues
were enraged by a lecture w h i c h he gave i n 1721, instancing the m o r a l p r e cepts of Confucius as evidence o f the p o w e r o f h u m a n reason to attain by its o w n efforts to m o r a l t r u t h
rationalism
31
C H E N U
Indeed, this explains the acrimonious controversies
i n the
decade 1940 to 1950, w h e n French D o m i n i c a n s and Jesuits, contesting the neoscholastic theology w h i c h p u t w o u l d - b e 'scientific' deductivism against the ressourcement of theology to be f o u n d i n the study o f the h i s t o r y and economy of salvation, and so i n the pastoral and missionary presence o f the w o r d o f G o d i n the C h u r c h , were persecuted b y the ecclesiastical a u t h o r i ties, removed f r o m teaching posts and prevented f r o m publishing. The
W o l f f invented the courses o n logic, ontology, rational psychology, natural
phrase 'new t h e o l o g y ' was applied, abusively, b y Garrigou-Lagrange and his
theology, m o r a l philosophy, and so o n , w h i c h shaped Catholic seminary
cohort i n R o m e to those (like C h e n u and H e n r i de Lubac) w h o questioned
t r a i n i n g i n t o the 1960s, as w e l l as university philosophy faculties every-
the neoscholastic rationalism, w h i c h cut Catholic theologians off f r o m their
where
inheritance - the 'traditional t h e o l o g y ' w h i c h the so-called ' n e w theo-
This division o f labour fragmented philosophy i n the sense o f a
sapiential exercise, a 'love o f w i s d o m ' , and gave rise to the specialisms w i t h
logians'were actually retrieving.
w h i c h w e are familiar i n professional philosophy For many years Gilson had been c l a i m i n g that 'WolfEanism' had i n f i l trated the w o r k of Garrigou-Lagrange, an outrageous suggestion as many thought. This is, as Peddicord says, 'preposterous'.
29
c l a i m seems to be that, i n his first major b o o k Le Sens commun (1908), Garrigou-Lagrange declares a debt to A f r i k a n Alexandrovich Spir (1837-90), whose b o o k Denken
unci Wirklichkeit:
T h e o l o g y w i t h o u t Philosophy?
The basis f o r Gilson's
Versuch einer Erneuerung
der kritischen
Philosophic (1873) he read i n French translation, the c o n d u i t t h r o u g h w h i c h , supposedly, he i m b i b e d W o l f f i a n rationalism. I h e genuine T h o m i s t understanding o f b e i n g - b e i n g as existence, n o t essence — was lost a r o u n d 1729, the year w h e n Wolff's Ontologia appeared. The act o f b e i n g as such - ipsum esse subsistens - w h i c h is so central to Aquinas's metaphysics, disappears f r o m m o d e r n philosophy, so Gilson's o f t e n rehearsed story goes. I t w o u l d take us t o o far to untangle all this here - the p o i n t is o n l y that Garrigou-Lagrange was being dismissed as a rationalist, as a self-styled T h o m i s t w h o failed to grasp the fundamental T h o m i s t i n t u i t i o n
Chenu invites us to examine the text o f the chapter De cognitione veritatis i n the De deposito fidei pure custodiendo drafted for Vatican I I H e r e w e f i n d , i n this w o u l d - b e key text o n 'keeping the treasure o f faith authentically', a certain theory of 'knowledge o f t r u t h ' (epistemology) at w o r k : t r u t h is allied w i t h inimutability, necessity, universal rationality, and suchlike.. Moreover, the p h i l osophy of being is contrasted favourably w i t h a philosophy of becoming. The dimensions of t i m e and history, i n knowledge o f truth, are totally absent I n short, the wholesale rejection of these drafts b y the C o u n c i l fathers opened the way to a renewal o f Catholic theology, 'beyond the aporias o f neoscholasticism, of w h i c h W o l f f i a n rationalism was n o t the least avatar'. A t last, 30
once and for all, C h e n u contends, at Vatican I I , the Catholic C h u r c h rejected the rationalism that prevented authentic understanding o f Thomas Aquinas, as
True e n o u g h , Garrigou-Lagrange attached great importance to the p r i n -
w e l l as all theological engagement w i t h the problems of m o d e r n life,
ciple of sufficient reason: ' E v e r y t h i n g w h i c h is, has a sufficient reason f o r existing'. That no d o u b t sounds Leibnizian, t h o u g h Garrigou-Lagrange always held that we d i d n o t need Leibniz to formulate this p r i n c i p l e This is the p r i n c i p l e , i n the Thomistic Theses, o n w h i c h the proofs for the existence o f G o d are based.
Consider, however, w h a t C h e n u t h e n says. The t r u t h o f biblical revelat i o n cannot be reduced to the f o r m a l t r u t h o f the propositions that state i t G o d is revealed i n actions and events as w e l l as i n words.. These events are n o t b r u t e facts, illustrating d i v i n e ideas (as w h o m i g h t have thought?)
They
are God's actions i n history It's n o t g o o d e n o u g h 'to study the abstract con-
Anyway, d o i n g little m o r e than Gilson to d o c u m e n t the claim, C h e n u
ditions of the possibility o f a revelation, deductively', as Garrigou-Lagrange
contends that the version o f I h o m i s m to w h i c h he was exposed at the
d i d , so C h e n u says, ' i n the f r a m e w o r k of a metaphysical conception of
A n g e l i c u m f r o m 1914 u n t i l 1920
truth'.
2 9
R i c h a r d P e d d i c o r d , The
Reginald
Garrigou-Lagrange
Sacred Monster
Qv ( S o u t h B e n d
was infiltrated by this E n l i g h t e n m e n t
of Thomistn • An Introduction
to the Life and Legacy of
I N : St A u s t i n s Press 2 0 0 5 ) : 103
footnote
70
3 1
'This analysis connects neither w i t h the historical c o n d i t i o n o f man
3 0
C h e n u . 'Vérité évangélique':
3 1
I b i d : 637
636
32
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
M A R I E - D O M I N I Q U E
C H E N U
33
C H E N U
n o r w i t h saving t r u t h ' I t is the 'purely extrinsic m e t h o d o f a certain f u n d a -
context, he brings o u t Aquinas's evangelical i n t e n t i o n and its actuality for
mental theology, rendered obsolete by the C o u n c i l ' .
today
3 2
W h a t we want, C h e n u goes o n , is a conception o f ' b i b l i c a l t r u t h , evangelical t r u t h , according to the H e b r e w m i n d ' - i t 'connects directly n o t w i t h w h a t is b u t w i t h w h a t comes about, w i t h that of w h i c h one has e x p e r i ence'
3 3
'Greek t h o u g h t developed b y reflecting o n the substance o f beings,
and issues i n t o a philosophy o f i m m u t a b i l i t y and permanence. I t left o u t the proper characteristic o f biblical t h o u g h t : time, the
fragility
o f things and
persons B i b l i c a l t h o u g h t is t u r n e d n o t to essences b u t to destinies; i t questions itself about the feeblenesses and the promises o f l i f e ' .
3 4
True, he allows, i t w o u l d be g i v i n g i n to a pernicious and historically
3 5
As f o r Chenu's legacy, i t may n o w be traced i n the w o r k o f many
theologians, such as Jean-Pierre Tbrrell, Gilles Emery, Gregory P. Rocca, and M a t t h e w Tevering, w h o take i t for granted that Aquinas needs to be studied i n historical context — w h i c h does n o t mean he has n o t h i n g to say that bears o n matters o f great theological interest today - just the opposite
3 6
The second v o l u m e o f Terrell's magnum opus presents Aquinas as 'spiritual master' - his theology as clearly o r i e n t e d towards contemplation as his spirituality expresses itself i n his theology T h o u g h he obviously owes far more to Chenu's example, perhaps Chenu's and Garrigou-Lagrange's versions o f T h o m i s m reach a degree o f reconciliation i n TorreHs b o o k .
controversial dualism to oppose the historical and concrete t r u t h o f the
T h e n , given the place o f n e o - A r i s t o t e l i a n ' v i r t u e ethics', at the c u t t i n g
Gospel to the abstract t r u t h o f G r e c o - T a t i n philosophy, defined as this latter
edge o f English-language m o r a l philosophy, as w e l l as i n C h r i s t i a n ethics,
is by adequatio rei et intellectus, i n a j u d g e m e n t w h i c h relates a statement w i t h
the best testimony to Chenu's advocacy of historical-contextualist studies as
the t r u t h o f being as being. .
the way to retrieve and appropriate Aquinas's t h o u g h t most creatively may
A n d he goes o n i n this strain, p l a y i n g off a
supposedly evangelical concept o f t r u t h against the concept of t r u t h i n h e r -
be f o u n d i n the w o r k o f the Belgian D o m i n i c a n Servais Pinckaers
i t e d f r o m ancient Greek philosophy A d m i t t e d l y , 30 years ago, the difference
doctoral dissertation - ' T h e V i r t u e o f H o p e f r o m Peter L o m b a r d to Thomas
between H e b r e w and Greek ways o f t h i n k i n g , and between biblical and
Aquinas' - was supervised by Garrigou-Lagrange - and he invited C h e n u to
metaphysical concepts o f t r u t h , was something of a commonplace,
w r i t e the preface to his first major b o o k , Le Renouveau de la morale (1964)
a m o n g Catholic theologians
even
His
3 7
N o d o u b t i t was h i g h t i m e that the grip o f
M o s t Catholic theologians, however, do n o t f i n d i t attractive, or even
neoscholastic rationalism was b r o k e n . B u t o p t i n g f o r a biblical n o t i o n of
necessary, to study Aquinas i n Chenu's or anyone else's way Outside the
t r u t h over against a metaphysical concept was a m o v e that w o u l d have
English-speaking w o r l d , especially, recourse to Aquinas seems mere anti-
excited Garrigou-Lagrange's suspicions, n o t altogether unjustifiably
quarianism, a failure to face up to the unavoidable implications o f p o s t m o d ernism. I n the most i n f l u e n t i a l m o v e m e n t currently i n Catholic theology, the Song o f Songs and the patristic and medieval commentaries
Conclusion Chenu's lasting achievement
thereon
play a m u c h m o r e significant role than Thomas Aquinas's w o r k
was to challenge from inside the standard
reading of the Summa Theologies Unbelievable as i t may seem to theologians i n other c h u r c h traditions, as w e l l as to Catholic theologians o f the postVatican I I era, fears that his approach led to relativism, and so to m o d e r n i s m , were so prevalent a m o n g his f e l l o w D o m i n i c a n s that he was dismissed
from
3 5
O r i g i n a l l y p u b l i s h e d i n 1 9 5 9 , r e c e n t l y translated w i t h a n i n t r o d u c t i o n b y P a u l J. P h i l i b e r t
O P ; see Aquinas 3i>
and His Role in Theology ( C o l l e g e v i l l e , M N : T h e L i t u r g i c a l Press 2 0 0 2 )
Jean-Pierre T o r r e l l O P Saint
Thomas
Aquinas,
vol
2 Spiritual
teaching i n any D o m i n i c a n i n s t i t u t i o n simply f o r insisting that Thomas
M I : Sapientia Press 2 0 0 2 ) ; G r e g o r y P R o c c a O P . Speaking
Aquinas's exposition o f the t r u t h o f C h r i s t i a n faith becomes all the more
Aquinas
enlightening as we read h i m i n historical context The best access to Chenu's distinctive approach to Aquinas is to be f o u n d i n a recently translated b o o k , i n w h i c h , by reconstructing the historical
Master
C a t h o l i c U n i v e r s i t y o f A m e r i c a Press 2 0 0 3 ) ; Gilles E m e r y O P Trinity on the Interplay
of Positive and Negative
the Incomprehensible
Fulfilment
D a m e , I N : U n i v e r s i t y o f N o t r e D a m e Press 2 0 0 2 ) , a n d Scripture
3 7
of Trinitarian
God'
Thomas
of Torah and Temple and Metaphysics'
(Notre
Aquinas
and
Theology ( O x f o r d : B l a c k w e l l 2 0 0 4 ) .
B o r n i n 1925 i n B e l g i u m Servais P i n c k a e r s j o i n e d t h e D o m i n i c a n s i n 1945. t a u g h t at the
University o f Fribourg
S w i t z e r l a n d , f r o m 1973:
E n g l i s h - l a n g u a g e w o r l d see
The
Sources of Christian
his i n f l u e n c e is o n l y n o w r e a c h i n g Ethics
3 2
Ibid
v e r s i t y o f A m e r i c a Press 1 9 9 5 ) ; a n d especially J o h n B e r k m a n a n d C r a i g Steven T i t u s
Ibid
The Pinckaers
Ibid : 637-8
sity o f A m e r i c a Press 2 0 0 5 )
Reader:
Renewing
Tlwmistic
Moral
Theology
the
(Washington D C : Catholic U n i -
3 3
3 4
DC:
(Ypsilanti
Theology ( W a s h i n g t o n D C : C a t h o l i c U n i v e r s i t y
o f A m e r i c a Press 2 0 0 4 ) ; M a t t h e w L e v e r i n g , Christ's the Renewal
(Washington
in Aquinas
(eds)
(Washington. D C : Catholic U n i v e r -
Y V E S
Chapter Three
35
C O N G A R
political m o v e m e n t attractive to Catholics w h o deplored the anti-clericalism o f the socialist politicians of the T h i r d R e p u b l i c and sometimes even wanted /
YVES
to restore the monarchy, as w e l l as the influence o f the Catholic C h u r c h .
CONGAR
4
The D o m i n i c a n s at L e Saulchoir, however, they regarded as treating the study o f Thomas Aquinas m o r e as an exercise i n historical scholarship intended to impress the medievalists at the Sorbonne, rather than the t i m e less system o f speculative theology w h i c h most D o m i n i c a n s at the t i m e t o o k i t to be. Congar's year o f m a n d a t o r y m i l i t a r y service (1924—5) was spent i n the R h i n e l a n d . H e forsook the diocesan clergy i n order to enter the D o m i n i c a n Order, where i n a year o r t w o he fell under C h e n u s spell. His first publica5
tions suggest he was destined f o r a future as a medievalist I t soon became clear to h i m , however, that his vocation lay i n w o r k i n g f o r Christian A c c o r d i n g to the A m e r i c a n Jesuit theologian A v e r y Dulles, i n an obituary, 'Vatican I I c o u l d almost be called Congar's C o u n c i l '
1
Yves Congar was b o r n o n 13 A p r i l 1904, at Sedan, i n the Ardennes region of north-east France, a f e w miles f r o m the frontier w i t h B e l g i u m . H i s father 2
Georges C o n g a r was a bank manager. H i s very devout m o t h e r L u c i e read The Imitation of Christ to the children and o n Saturday evenings the n e x t day's gospel text They had Jewish friends as w e l l as Protestant neighbours,
reunion. H i s first b o o k Chrétiens désunis appeared i n 1938, the first v o l u m e i n the series he f o u n d e d under the name Unam Sanctam - a series he saw as c o n t r i b u t i n g to C h r i s t i a n r e u n i o n , principally, i n the b e g i n n i n g anyway, by retrieving f o r g o t t e n themes o f Catholic t r a d i t i o n . A n anonymous article i n 6
UOsservatore
Romano
attacked the b o o k ; and the Provincial o f the Paris
D o m i n i c a n s was s u m m o n e d to R o m e to explain w h y the b o o k had been p e r m i t t e d to appear.
unusual f o r Catholics i n France i n those days Back i n the sixteenth century
As a reservist Congar was m o b i l i z e d i n September 1939. H e was captured
the local princes were Protestant E v e n i n the early t w e n t i e t h , w h e n the
i n M a y 1940, w h e n France surrendered T h e next five years he spent i n
pr inces were o f course l o n g gone, there were Protestants and Catholics and
high-security prisons, t w i c e at C o l d i t z Back f r o m the war, he was impatient
even a f e w Jews l i v i n g peaceably together i n the t o w n R i g h t i n the path o f
to c o n t i n u e his interest i n p r o m o t i n g C h r i s t i a n reunion. Few Catholics i n
the G e r m a n a r m y i n 1914, the t o w n was besieged, and the C a t h o l i c church
the English-speaking w o r l d understand the traumatic effects i n t h e ancient
b u r n e d d o w n . The Catholics were allowed b y the R e f o r m e d pastor to use
Catholic countries o f western E u r o p e of the serial catastrophes o f Nazism,
the local Protestant church f o r Sunday worship. Congar's father was a m o n g
m i l i t a r y occupation, collaboration, the r o u n d - u p of Jews, the invasion and
the m e n deported by the Germans to L i t h u a n i a , occupied b y the G e r m a n
the b o m b i n g , and so on. I n 1945 the C h r i s t i a n faith, and especially the
army i n September 1915
Catholic C h u r c h , was rising f r o m the dead, r e t u r n i n g f r o m hell t o n e w life
Encouraged by a local priest, Congar entered the diocesan seminary I n
I n 1950 Congar published Vraie et fausse réforme dam l'Eglise
1
This went
1921 he m o v e d to Paris, to study philosophy H e attended courses by Jacques M a r i t a i n , the lay m a n w h o was soon to become one o f the leaders of
4
the renaissance o f T h o m i s m
t h e T h i r d R e p u b l i c w h i c h was e x t r e m e l y a n t i - C a t h o l i c
3
H e w e n t to retreats conducted near Paris b y
R e g i n a l d Garrigou-Lagrange. They were all d r a w n to A c t i o n Française, a
A c t i o n Française was f o u n d e d i n 1898 at t h e h e i g h t o f t h e D r e y f u s affair a n d was hostile t o I h e b e s t - k n o w n leader
Charles
M a u r r a s ( 1 8 6 8 - 1 9 5 2 ) . j o u r n a l i s t , p h i l o s o p h e r , m o n a r c h i s t , m i l i t a n t atheist a n d a n t i - S e m i t e , o n l y b e c a m e a C a t h o l i c i n b i s last years I n 1926 P o p e P i u s X I f o r b a d e C a t h o l i c s t o s u p p o r t t h e m o v e m e n t because o f its e x t r e m e n a t i o n a l i s m a n d m i s a p p r o p r i a t i o n o f C a t h o l i c d o c t r i n e
1
A v e r y D u l l e s SJ ' Y v e s C o n g a r : I n A p p r e c i a t i o n ' America
2
F o r details see A i d a n N i c h o l s O P , Yves Congar
E l i z a b e t h Teresa G r o p p e , Yves Congar's Theology
H i s a c t i o n p r o v o k e d a grave crisis o f c o n s c i e n c e f o r m a n y clergy a n d f a i t h f u l
173 (15 J u l y 1 9 9 5 ) : 6 - 7 .
( L o n d o n : Geoffrey C h a p m a n 1989); and
of the Holy
Spirit ( O x f o r d : O x f o r d U n i v e r s i t y
Press 2 0 0 4 ) 3
Jacques M a r i t a i n
5
6
(1882-1973), a French
I h o m i s t p h i l o s o p h e r , h e l d chairs at
Paris,
T o r o n t o a n d P r i n c e t o n . H e a p p l i e d I h o m i s t p r i n c i p l e s t o m e t a p h y s i c s , m o r a l , social a n d p o l i t i c a l p h i l o s o p h y , t h e p h i l o s o p h y o f e d u c a t i o n , h i s t o r y , c u l t u r e a n d art.
As a n o v i c e h e was g i v e n t h e n a m e M a r i e - J o s e p h , e v e n t u a l l y d r o p p e d ; his e a r l y p u b l i c a -
t i o n s are a t t r i b u t e d t o M -J. C o n g a r Chrétiens
Divided 7
désunis:
Christendom:
Principes
d'un
Vraie et fausse réforme dans l'Église
revised e d i t i o n
1969
'oecuménisme'
catholique
A Catholic Study of the Problem of Reunion
(Paris: C e r f 1937)
translated as
( L o n d o n : C e n t e n a r y Press 1939)
(Paris: C e r f 1 9 5 0 ) ; never translated i n t o E n g l i s h ; second,
36
Y V E S
C O N G A R
Y V E S
C O N G A R
37
t o o far - the very idea o f ' r e f o r m ' , w h e t h e r true or false, i n the C a t h o l i c
1958 Congar was allowed to publish his b o o k Le Mystère du temple - a study
C h u r c h , was a provocation The papal n u n c i o i n Paris, A r c h b i s h o p A n g e l o
o f the history of the presence o f G o d i n the w o r l d f r o m Genesis to the
R o n c a l l i , inscribed i n his o w n copy the question ' A r e f o r m o f the C h u r c h -
Apocalypse - the p r o d u c t of some months o f exile i n Jerusalem There was
is i t possible?' Less than t e n years later, w h e n he had b e c o m e Pope
no possibility o f republishing, even w i t h revisions he wanted to make, any o f
John X X I I I , the idea that the C a t h o l i c C h u r c h c o u l d be r e f o r m e d
the three great books
-
r enewed, anyway - was f i r m l y o n the agenda. I n 1953, as i f anticipating that renewal, Congar b r o u g h t o u t Jalons pour une théologie du laicat
T h e n , to everyone's amazement and many people's dismay, Pope John
8
X X I I I announced i n January
laid out w h a t
c o u n c i l , the Second Vatican C o u n c i l - to r e f o r m the C h u r c h e x p l i c i t l y i n
w o u l d , quite unexpectedly, dominate the agenda f o r Vatican I I : a f o r m o f
order to b r i n g about r e u n i o n a m o n g Christians I n July 1960 Congar was
ecumenism acceptable to Catholics; acceptance o f the t r u t h that the C h u r c h
a m o n g the first appointed by John X X I I I t o draft texts for the bishops to
was always i n need o f r e f o r m (ecdesia semper reformando); and recovery o f a
consider. I n i t i a l l y C o n g a r was sceptical about any g o o d the C o u n c i l m i g h t
sense o f the C h u r c h as the people o f G o d , clergy and laity together. A t last
do, assuming, as many others d i d , that there c o u l d o n l y be a wave o f c o n -
D a t e d now, o f course, these three books nevertheless
1959
that he was c o n v o k i n g a full-scale
the Catholic C h u r c h w o u l d concede that Christians outside her visible
demnations o f C o m m u n i s m , o f the ' n e w theology', of 'ecumenism', and o f
membership were at least w o r t h t a l k i n g to, their 'churches' had elements o f
m u c h else, or, o n the positive side, a dogmatic d e f i n i t i o n o f t h e Blessed
'true C h u r c h ' i n them.
V i r g i n M a r y as M e d i a t r i x of A l l Graces.
9
I f Congar was already under suspicion i n 1938 f o r his ecumenical i n t e r -
O n 20 N o v e m b e r 1962, after days of b i t t e r exchanges i n the aula, the
ests, worse was to come i n 1953 w h e n he became interested i n the w o r k e r -
m a j o r i t y o f the C o u n c i l fathers v o t e d against the draft text de fontibus rev-
priest movement. Its members were priests w h o sought to evangelize the
elationis, o n 'the sources' of C h r i s t i a n revelation, the w o r k o f a team o f
deeply anti-clerical industrial workers b y b e c o m i n g workers themselves, i n
(mostly) R o m a n university theologians, presided over b y C a r d i n a l O t t a -
the hope o f breaking d o w n the barrier. T h e m o v e m e n t w o r r i e d many o f
v i a n i and Sebastian T r o m p sj. T h e vote - 1368 to 822 w i t h 19 n u l l - d i d
the French bishops Some bishops feared that these priests were losing their
n o t reach the t w o - t h i r d s required b y the rules to reject a text — t h o u g h i t
priestly status, accepting election as trades u n i o n officials, and so on. A n
was nonetheless an affront to those w h o regarded themselves, and were
article he published i n September 1953 o n the future o f the m o v e m e n t l e d
w i d e l y regarded, as t h e custodians o f C a t h o l i c d o c t r i n e John X X I I I exer-
to Cougar 's b e i n g dismissed f r o m teaching at Le Saulchoir, and f o r b i d d e n to
cised his a u t h o r i t y o n the side o f the m a j o r i t y , n a m i n g a new commission
set f o o t i n any study house o f the D o m i n i c a n Order. This was o n l y an
to compose a fresh text This was the t u r n i n g p o i n t , n o t only the defeat o f
excuse: suspicion of his interest i n C h r i s t i a n r e u n i o n was the true reason f o r
the H o l y O f f i c e theologians; b u t , as many saw at the time, incredulously,
the treatment to w h i c h the Order subjected h i m , perhaps under pressure
w i t h delight o r dismay, the close o f an age - i n p r i n c i p l e , at least. Congar's
f r o m Vatican authorities N o t h i n g C o n g a r published was ever censured b y
doubts about John X X I I I and the C o u n c i l were settled. B y early 1963 he
the H o l y O f f i c e , or placed o n the Index o f P r o h i b i t e d Books, n o r was he
was playing a major part i n drafting the n e w texts w h i c h eventually became
ever s u m m o n e d to defend his ideas i n R o m e . H e was kept h a n g i n g about,
the documents o f Vatican I I ,
mostly i n R o m e , w h i l e no one, n o n e o f his f e l l o w D o m i n i c a n friars, c o u l d or w o u l d tell h i m w h y he was f o r b i d d e n to teach or preach o r publish or live i n the same house as friars i n f o r m a t i o n . Congar's misery culminated i n February 1956 w h e n he was sent by the Master o f the O r d e r to the English D o m i n i c a n house i n C a m b r i d g e , f o r an indefinite p e r i o d , f o r b i d d e n to lecture or preach This proved the unhappiest six m o n t h s o f his life, worse
D u r i n g the C o u n c i l Congar published t w o volumes o n the theology o f Sacred Tradition (1960 and 1963): the r e f o r m or renewal of the Catholic C h u r c h that he envisaged was t o be o n the basis of a retrieval of t h e fullness of the Catholic t r a d i t i o n that he believed had been lost as Catholics reacted against Protestantism i n the so-called C o u n t e r - R e f o r m a t i o n , and against
than b e i n g i n C o l d i t z I n D e c e m b e r 1956 the bishop o f Strasbourg rescued h i m , quite as arbitrarily, enabling h i m to resume a (limited) m i n i s t r y I n
9
F o r decades m a n y C a t h o l i c s have w a n t e d M a r y d e c l a r e d M e d i a t r i x o f A l l Graces o r C o -
R e d e m p t r i x : as M o t h e r o f G o d (Theotoko.s:
G o d - b e a r e r ) she has f o r ever a m a t e r n a l - m e d i a t i n g
role i n G o d s s e l f - c o m m u n i c a t i o n t o the faithful (entirely subordinate and speaking analoK
Jalons pour une théologie
du laicat (Paris: C e r f 1953)
Study for the Theology of the Laity
translated as Lay People in the Church-
( W e s t m i n s t e r M D : N e w m a n Press 1965).
A
g o u s l y ) ; as t h e o n e w h o gave h e r c o n s e n t at t h e A n n u n c i a t i o n she has a c o - o p e r a t i v e role i n t h e h i s t o r y o f r e d e m p t i o n (again o f course, s u b o r d i n a t e a n d analogously)
38
Y V E S
Y V E S
C O N G A R
39
C O N G A R
I n 1937 Congar visited England, as a guest o f A M
the ancient churches o f the East w h e n they rejected papal a u t h o r i t y as c o n
Ramsey,, w h o m u c h
later became A r c h b i s h o p o f Canterbury and a f r i e n d o f Pope Paul V I H e
ceived and practised i n the early M i d d l e Ages. I n the aftermath Congar published m u c h , d o c u m e n t i n g h o w traditional Vatican II's understanding o f the C h u r c h actually was Finally, i n 1979-80, he published a major w o r k o n the doctrine o f the H o l y Spirit -
fell i n love w i t h Anglicanism, at least w i t h the beauty o f the l i t u r g y i n a great cathedral like L i n c o l n , w h e r e he stayed w i t h R a m s e y
1 2
elementary
A m a z i n g as this all n o w seems, t a l k i n g theology and praying, w i t h L u t h
i n the w a y i t summarizes the history o f h o w the presence o f the H o l y Spirit
erans, Anglicans and O r t h o d o x , was w i d e l y regarded as inappropriate for
has been perceived d o w n t h r o u g h the ages and across the various c o n f l i c t i n g
Catholics.. T h e r e were, o f course, suspicions o n b o t h sides - the O r t h o d o x ,
ecclesiastical traditions - the ultimate a i m , however, being to prepare the
even today, are o f t e n suspicious o f overtures f r o m R o m e , greeting t h e m as
way f o r r e u n i o n between Eastern and Western C h r i s t i a n i t y
n e w ways to trap the O r t h o d o x i n t o submission to Rome's longstanding
Gradually incapacitated by the neurological disease first detected i n 1935,
desire for c o n t r o l , as the O r t h o d o x see it, n o t altogether unjustifiably
Congar was m o v e d i n 1984 to Les Invalides, the m i l i t a r y hospital f o r heroes o f the Republic, where he died o n 22 June 1995, having been named a Car
Divided
dinal by Pope John Paul I I the previous year - an h o n o u r w h i c h Congar
Christendom
accepted although, i n his view, the status by the eleventh century o f the Cardinals i n R o m e had all but destroyed the a u t h o r i t y o f the episcopate .
I n Divided Christendom
1 0
Congar outlines the historical origins of the division
between Eastern and Western C h r i s t i a n i t y and, secondly, the split i n the West at the R e f o r m a t i o n . The f o r m e r Congar attributes to political and c u l tural factors, m u c h exacerbated b y the advance of Islam The gulf between
Ecumenism
Protestants and Catholics is 'practically impassable': indeed, we should speak Preparing for o r d i n a t i o n to priesthood, i n 1930,
Congar meditated o n
o f ' t w o different Christianities'
Protestant o p p o s i t i o n to Catholicism is
chapter 17 o f the f o u r t h gospel - 'that all shall be one' T h e n - unheard o f at
(however) quite understandable: i n theology and piety, there was 'a great
the t i m e , f o r a Catholic theologian — he w a n t e d to meet Christians o f other
emphasis o n man's o w n m o r a l activity and a less-marked sense o f the
traditions H e visited Germany, to meet L u t h e r a n pastors and professors
supreme theocentricism
N e v e r having heard o f the legend of the Grand I n q u i s i t o r (in Dostoevsky's
j u r i d i c o - s o c i a l aspect o f the C h u r c h that b y m i d - n i n e t e e n t h c e n t u r y the
Brothers Karamazov)
he was shocked to learn that, for his n e w L u t h e r a n
of the great t r a d i t i o n ' ; and such stress o n the
C h u r c h was 'as m u c h l i k e a fortress as a t e m p l e ' .
13
friends, this was their picture o f the Catholic C h u r c h : 'Catholics are the
The doctrine o f the u n i t y of the C h u r c h is grounded i n G o d as Trinity;
subjects o f the Pope and prisoners i n a hierarchical ecclesiastical system
historically given i n C h r i s t ; the C h u r c h his Mystical Body, the People of
w h e r e consciences are enslaved, the relations o f souls w i t h G o d are at
G o d , a fellowship, a great sacrament, and so o n Chapter 3, o n the C a t h o l i c
second-hand and stereotyped - r e l i g i o n i n fact b y p r o x y for the benefit o f
ity o f the C h u r c h , insists that the 'great diversity o f religious experience - o f
the clergy, an ecclesiastical k i n g d o m o f w h i c h the Pope is the autocrat.'
ways of feeling o r l i v i n g the C h r i s t i a n life and of i n t e r p r e t i n g the religious
11
Whatever else m i n i s t r y i n the service o f C h r i s t i a n r e u n i o n w o u l d mean, so
objectivity — is n o t only legitimate b u t desirable i n the C h u r c h ' (110)..
Congar realized, the first and most urgent requirement was to engage i n dis cussion w i t h Lutherans i n order to liberate t h e m f r o m their prejudices about w h a t Catholics actually d i d and t h o u g h t - and he w o u l d n o t get very far w i t h o u t d o i n g his best to learn w h a t Protestants actually d i d and t h o u g h t -
Chapter 4 offers a fairly severe critique o f the theories u n d e r l y i n g the Ecumenical M o v e m e n t , first as manifested i n the S t o c k h o l m Conference İn 1925 - w h i c h 'emanated f r o m a pragmatist and chiefly English-speaking
to overcome his o w n prejudices. 1 2
A r t h u r M i c h a e l R a m s e y ( 1 9 0 4 - 8 8 ) was a p p o i n t e d s u b w a r d e n o f L i n c o l n t h e o l o g i c a l
c o l l e g e i n 1930; c a n o n - p r o f e s s o r at D u r h a m i n 1940; B i s h o p o f D u r h a m i n 1952, A r c h b i s h o p 1 0
I n 1059
n o d o u b t u n d e r the influence o f H i l d e b r a n d , the f u t u r e Pope G r e g o r y V I I , Pope
o f Y o r k i n 1956, a n d was A r c h b i s h o p o f C a n t e r b u r y f r o m 1961 t o 1 9 7 4 ; see his The Gospel
N i c h o l a s ¡1 r u l e d t h a t t h e c a r d i n a l bishops a l o n e s h o u l d elect t h e p o p e ( i n t h e h o p e o f e x c l u d
the Catholic
i n g simony)
1 3
1 1
Divided
Christendom:
34
text
Divided
Church
and
(1936), w h i c h Congar m u c h admired
Christendom:
33, 35
S u b s e q u e n t page references f o r q u o t a t i o n s are g i v e n i n the
40
Y V E S
Y V E S
C O N G A R
milieu under the aegis o f a Protestant modernist'; and t h e n at Lausanne
Intégrisme
(1927): 'a characteristic p r o d u c t o f the A n g l i c a n o u t l o o k ' — c o n c l u d i n g that Catholic co-operation should take the f o r m o f ' t h e o l o g i c a l assistance', 'certainly n o t the f o r m o f official membership'.
41
C O N G A R
Vraie et fausse réforme dans l'Eglise
runs to 650 pages. I n the first part Congar
deals w i t h sin i n the C h u r c h (chapter 1); h o w r e f o r m should take place
Chapter 5 outlines A n g l i c a n doctrine of the C h u r c h , as C o n g a r u n d e r -
(chapter 2); and the part played b y r e f o r m i n g prophets (chapter 3)
The
stands i t , quite sympathetically, c o n c l u d i n g however that, as to ' n o n - R o m a n
second part lays o u t f o u r conditions for r e f o r m w i t h o u t schism: a c k n o w -
Catholicism', i f that is w h a t Anglicans believe they represent, t h e n 'there is
l e d g i n g the p r i m a c y o f charity; remaining i n c o m m u n i o n w i t h the w h o l e
n o such t h i n g ' (197)
C h u r c h ; patience; and renewal by ressourcement, r e t u r n to the sources. The
O r t h o d o x y , i t turns o u t i n chapter 6, has an ' i n c o m p l e t e ' ecclesiology;
t h i r d part deals w i t h the R e f o r m a t i o n , p r i n c i p a l l y w i t h Luther, contending
nonetheless Congar breaks w i t h the t h e n prevalent Catholic v i e w that
that the m e d i a t o r y role o f the visible C h u r c h falls away i n t o o b l i v i o n . I n the
Christians w h o were n o t i n c o m m u n i o n w i t h R o m e and thus under the
conclusion C o n g a r admits understandable reservations and hesitancies but
a u t h o r i t y o f the H o l y See are ipso facto 'heretics' Indeed, so Congar c o n -
argues that the t i m e is ripe, especially i n France: there is n o t h i n g 'modernist'
tends, Catholics have m u c h t o learn f r o m the Russian C h u r c h ('to k n o w
or ' r e v o l u t i o n a r y ' to fear; the bishops are w e l c o m i n g , the w o u l d - b e r e f o r m -
and experience a m o r e i n t e r i o r and mystical o u t l o o k ' , 220). A b o u t Greek
ers are loyal Catholics; the r e f o r m required obviously issues out o f pastoral
O r t h o d o x y , oddly, he says n o t h i n g
concern.
Chapter 7 invites Catholics to see other Christians as 'brethren' — 'separated' yes; b u t as 'Christians w h o already possess i n greater or lesser degree w h a t we desire to see fulfilled i n t h e m , and w h o themselves secretly l o o k f o r such a c o n s u m m a t i o n ' (247). T h o u g h ' b o r n i n t o an erroneous f o r m o f Christianity', n o n - R o m a n - C a t h o l i c Christians are 'very rarely real heretics'. I n the c o n c l u d i n g chapter, an o u t l i n e f o r a practical programme, Congar allows that 'some day we shall have complete r e u n i o n ' , namely w i t h the Eastern C h u r c h . For any chance o f r e u n i o n w i t h Protestants, however, 'vast changes' w o u l d be required - 'the specifically Protestant m i n d is gradually destructive o f the objects o f its o w n belief, and o f w h a t survives o f the h e r -
Nevertheless Congar acknowledges the p r o b l e m o f a split - une scission spirituelle - a m o n g Catholics, between one c o u n t r y and another, France and (say) Flanders,
Quebec, the Netherlands, Ireland; and also
between Catholics i n the same c o u n t r y ! Accordingly, the b o o k ends w i t h 18 pages o n intégrisme i n France. M o d ernism, as i t existed f r o m 1895 to 1910, C o n g a r says, was indeed a heresy H e happily quotes Pope Pius X against it. Intégristes, o n the other hand, maximize o r t h o d o x y so m u c h that this also becomes a way out o f C a t h o l i cism. H e adapts N e w m a n , w r i t i n g to W G W a r d :
itage o f historic Christianity' (274).
P a r d o n m e i f 1 say t h a t y o u are m a k i n g a C h u r c h w i t h i n a C h u r c h , as
T h a t last remark c o u l d have been made by any a n t i - m o d e r n i s t I t is d i f f i -
N o v a t i a n s o f o l d d i d w i t h i n t h e C a t h o l i c p a l e , a n d , as o u t s i d e t h e
cult to imagine w h y colleagues and the authorities i n R o m e were so
pale, the Evangelicals o f t h e Establishment
w o r r i e d about Congar's principles o f Catholic ecumenism..
make a party i n the Catholic
H e sees no
Christ by exalting your opinions into dogma
remote - o f r e u n i o n w i t h the A n g l i c a n Church.. T h e ecclesiology o f the
against y o u r tenets, b u t against w h a t I m u s t call y o u r schismatical
O r t h o d o x is defective, yet, so he thinks, they are definitely n o t heretics M o r e shocking, however, was
n o d o u b t the assertion that n o n - R o m a n - C a t h o l i c
churches have ' i n greater
o r lesser degree' true elements o f w h a t the C h u r c h really is - other C h r i s tians, that is to say, are members o f churches w h i c h are, sacramentally and i n other ways, n o t completely and totally n u l l and v o i d
the
Catholic
. . . y o u are d o i n g y o u r b e s t t o
C h u r c h , a n d i n S t P a u l ' s w o r d s are
chance of r e u n i o n w i t h Protestant churches - and perhaps the possibility —
perhaps that was a shocking t h o u g h t i n 1938
between
dividing
. . I protest then again, spirit
not
1 4
Lhis sectarian tendency to maximize whatever is settled by a u t h o r i t y slips i n t o c o n d e m n i n g all openness, research, and questioning o f received ideas. A Catholic's o r t h o d o x y becomes measurable b y the degree of hatred that he shows for those he suspects of heterodoxy The p r o b l e m w i t h intégrisme is, finally, Congar thinks, that i t has t o o little confidence i n the t r u t h , insufficient love o f the t r u t h - ' f o r d enlarge m y soul, as Catherine of Siena prayed.'
1 4
9 M a y 1867. q u o t i n g W W a r d rheLifccfJ.H
Cardinal Newman (1913). v o l . 2 : 2 3 3 ; n o w Tlie
Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, v o l X X I I I ( O x f o r d : C l a r e n d o n Press 1 9 7 3 ) : 2 1 6 - 1 7
42
Y V E S
Y V E S
C O N G A R
canonical and theological t r a d i t i o n means by ' c o l l e g i a l i t y ' . I t was a fact of 16
Lay People in the Church
life f o r centuries
Lay People in the Church is a classic. For decades, especially under the i n f l u ence o f Pius X I and Pius X I I , there were tremendous developments i n the lay apostolate. I t was t i m e f o r reflection and an attempt to recapitulate the place o f lay people, structured o n the d o c t r i n e o f their p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n the Church's t h r e e - f o l d priestly, regal/pastoral and prophetical function.. The theology o f laity really demanded a total ecclesiology.. The C h u r c h is the collectivity o f the faithful, the congregatio fidelium i n a phrase that Congar likes to quote f r o m Thomas Aquinas T h e faithful, one has to remember, include the clergy! For generations, i n understandable b u t one-sided reactions to 'spiritual' sects, conciliarism, Gallicanism, the R e f o r m a t i o n , and so o n , Congar says, ecclesiology gradually became ' h i e r archology'
The lay apostolate has o u t m o d e d this. C l e r g y and laity p a r t i c i -
pate equally i n Christ's messianic mission, yet i n different ways: the clergy, by celebrating the sacraments, constitute the f a i t h f u l people; whereas the laity, b y their graced activities, consecrate the w o r l d , m a k i n g o f all things a sacrifice o f praise and temple o f G o d . W e need to retrieve the d o c t r i n e o f the priesthood of the laity, w h i c h Congar develops entirely o n the basis o f quotations f r o m Aquinas The regal or pastoral f u n c t i o n extends to the laity's p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n r u n n i n g the C h u r c h , Congar recalls h o w m u c h lay people have done, historically, i n administrative and legal matters. H e includes a paragraph o n the possibility of a lay man's b e i n g elected pope, as Benedict V I I I i n 1012 and John X I X i n 1024 were, he tells us A small piece o f f o r g o t t e n history d e stabilizes a l o n g - h e l d assumption
43
C O N G A R
The t e r m 'collegiality' needs to be allowed tb retrieve its
m e a n i n g i n the cluster o f allied concepts related to C h r i s t i a n life i n f e l l o w ship and c o m m u n i t y I t is a T r i n i t a r i a n concept: the sublime mystery o f the H o l y T r i n i t y is 'a sort o f c o n c e l e b r a t i o n '
17
- w h i c h is the law o f the w h o l e
economy o f grace. As Paul says (1 C o r i n t h i a n s 1 1 , Ephesians 5), hierarchy and people are l i k e husband and w i f e (sid) trine'
1 8
This involves ' m u c h deep doc-
W h a t happens i n the C h u r c h is o n analogy w i t h 'the happiness of
c o m m u n i n g w i t h as w e l l as c o m m u n i c a t i n g to, o f g i v i n g itself a f e l l o w as partner and helper, w i t h w h o m a dialogue and co-operation are set up, then a sharing, and finally a c o m m u n i o n ' ,
1 9
namely, i n the t r i u n e Godhead
These remarks, m o r e provisional than the summary makes t h e m sound, anticipate the d o c t r i n e o f nuptiality w h i c h , as w e shall f i n d , came t o d o m i nate Catholic theology by the end o f the t w e n t i e t h century. This leads to the sensm fidelium: ' T h e C h u r c h l o v i n g and believing, that is, the b o d y o f the faithful, is infallible i n the l i v i n g possession of its f a i t h ' . This ' i n f a l l i b i l i t y ' is ' n o t simply a submissive deference to the hierarchy, a moral act o f docility or obedience, b u t i t is o f a vital, m o r a l nature, connected w i t h righteous l i v i n g '
2 0
Finally, Congar trawls t h r o u g h history f o r evidence o f lay participation i n teaching the C h r i s t i a n faith, by poets and artists, by m a n y lay movements, and by lay theologians - back to Justin, Tertullian and suchlike H e returns, at length - 150 pages - to Catholic A c t i o n , lay people taking part i n the Church's mission; lay holiness; sanctification i n the w o r l d , the existing reality o n w h i c h his b o o k is o n l y a reflection.
1 5
As for the prophetical f u n c t i o n , C o n g a r insists that, i n d o c t r i n a l develop-
Vatican I I
m e n t , there is co-operation, i n the conservation and development o f the deposit o f faith, between laity and clergy I n the C h u r c h , all are animated by the H o l y Spirit, according to their place and part: the bishops to teach, the laity to believe; but b e l i e v i n g is an active appropriation, n o t mere passivity Congar introduces the Russian O r t h o d o x idea o f sobornost',
suggesting
O n the eve o f the C o u n c i l , i n 1962, Yves Congar's help was n o t wanted, either by the French bishops or by the Master of the D o m i n i c a n Order, despite his h a v i n g taken part i n the preparatory drafting I n August 1962 he
that the translation as ' c o n c i l i a r i t y ' should give way to w h a t the Western 1 6
T h e Russian w o r d sobornost' ( c a t h o l i c i t y ) means that t h e c a t h o l i c i t y o f the C h u r c h is f o u n d
i n t h e u n i t y i n C h r i s t w h i c h exists i n t h e e v e n t o f t h e w o r s h i p p i n g c o n g r e g a t i o n especially i n H e doesn't g o far e n o u g h : B e n e d i c t V I I I (pope 1 0 1 2 - 2 4 ) a n d J o h n X I X ( 1 0 2 4 - 3 2 ) w e r e
t h e eucharist; t a u g h t b y R u s s i a n t h e o l o g i a n s such as G e o r g e s F l o r o v s k y ( 1 8 9 3 - 1 9 7 9 ) a n d
b r o t h e r s , succeeded b y t h e i r n e p h e w , B e n e d i c t I X ( 1 0 3 2 - 4 5 ) , also a lay m a n . H e . i n t u r n , a b d i -
A l e x e i K h o m i a k o v ( 1 8 0 4 - 6 0 ) . i t perhaps has n o t s u c h p r o m i n e n c e i n O r t h o d o x t r a d i t i o n as
cated i n favour o f his g o d f a t h e r G r e g o r y V I ( 1 0 4 5 - 6 ) , w h o was deposed b y a s y n o d called a n d
C o n g a r seems t o t h i n k .
1 5
presided over b y t h e H o l y R o m a n E m p e r o r , w h o t h e n h a d 'elected' t h e first o f t h e f o u r G e r m a n popes he i m p o s e d : n o t a g l o r i o u s p e r i o d i n papal h i s t o r y b u t s h o w i n g that t h r e e popes w e r e lay
1 7
Lay People in the Church:
1 8
I b i d : 272
m e n w h e n elected w h i l e o n e was deposed and f o u r i m p o s e d , b y a k e e n y o u n g lay m a n d e t e r -
1 9
I b i d : 271
m i n e d t o r e f o r m t h e C h u r c h , o r a n y w a y t o get t h e papacy o u t o f o n e R o m a n family's clutches
2 0
I b i d : 275
271
44
YVES
CONGAIÍ
YVES
45
CONGAR
offered his services to the bishop o f Strasbourg w h o at first refused - n o t ,
I n O c t o b e r 1963 a large m a j o r i t y o f the C o u n c i l fathers voted i n favour
however, because of reluctance to e m p l o y the still suspected theologian,
o f the doctrine o f collegiality - that supreme a u t h o r i t y i n the C h u r c h lay
o n l y because he feared he w o u l d have to pay Congar's expenses i n R o m e .
w i t h the bishops as a w h o l e , o f course i n c l u d i n g the pope. However, over
However, he was a m o n g the 200 'experts' appointed by Pope John X X I I I .
408 were against the doctrine. A f t e r m u c h redrafting, i n response to the
I n the event, t h o u g h Congar was n o t the p r i n c i p a l begetter o f the Vatican I I
bishops' w r i t t e n suggestions, w h e n the text was resubmitted i n September
d o c u m e n t o n the C h u r c h , the layout - the C h u r c h as mystery, as people o f
1964 there were still 322 o u t o f 2,000 against the doctrine - and this m i n o r -
G o d , as clergy and laity, and so o n - obviously displays his sense o f p r i o r i t i e s
i t y i n c l u d e d many p o w e r f u l figures. M o r e than four decades o n , w h i l e they
i n e x p o u n d i n g the doctrine.
are no d o u b t all dead, the fact remains that there has n o t been a n y t h i n g like
W h i l e the idea of a chapter o n 'the people o f G o d ' seems to have been
the decentralization, the r e t u r n o f a u t h o r i t y to local bishops, that the text
suggested b y A l b e r t P r i g n o n , t h e n R e c t o r o f the Belgian College i n R o m e ,
promulgated i n 1964
Congar drafted it. I n his j o u r n a l , f o r 2 O c t o b e r 1963, Congar records the
m a j o r i t y o f the bishops expected to be balanced by n e w or revitalized
envisages. The power o f the papal C u r i a that the
speech by the Master o f the D o m i n i c a n Order, attacking the idea of the
instruments o f collective episcopal a u t h o r i t y seems, i f anything, o n l y to have
C h u r c h as the people o f G o d , w a r n i n g o f the risk o f falling i n t o exaggerated
become m o r e secure, as we enter the t w e n t y - f i r s t century
democratismus H e recor ds the very fair presentation (as he thinks) o f the idea o f episcopal coHegiality by Cardinal M i c h a e l B r o w n e , spokesman f o r the doctrine commission; m a k i n g i t clear however that he (Browne) rejected
Religious Liberty
the doctrine himself: to say the bishops f o r m e d a college w o u l d be to say they were all equal — w h i c h c o u l d n o t be r i g h t , since bishops have n o j u r i s d i c t i o n outside their o w n diocese; i f they share i n governing the C h u r c h i t is by favour o f the pope, he alone is the source o f their a u t h o r i t y
2 1
Yves Congar had a h a n d i n half of the Vatican I I texts, at some stage ments o f t r u t h and grace i n n o n - C a t h o l i c
Back i n 1953, as we saw, Congar p u t the w o r d 'collegiahty' i n t o circula-
The
Decree o n E c u m e n i s m contains his dearest themes: recognition o f the eleChristian c o m m u n i t i e s ;
importance o f 'dialogue'; of 'spiritual ecumenism';
the
and o f ' r e f o r m '
He
tion. The idea o f the Apostles as a college, i n parallel w i t h the bishops as an
w o r k e d closely w i t h his y o u n g colleague Joseph Ratzinger o n r e w r i t i n g the
order, was already to be f o u n d i n the draft constitution de ecclesia prepared
rather miserable draft o n Missions - p r o d u c i n g what is acknowledged to be
f o r discussion i n 1870.
one o f the finest texts.
Few k n e w these texts, i n w h i c h i t was n o t e d , f o r
example, that ancient conciliar practice shows i t to be a dogma o f faith that
B u t n o t h i n g is m o r e revealing about Congar's character, as w e l l as his
the bishops share i n governing and teaching the universal C h u r c h . I n 1963,
ecumenical approach, than his involvement i n drafting Dignitatis
however, this talk o f episcopal collegiality seemed n e w - a n e w l y introduced
the Declaration o n R e l i g i o u s L i b e r t y The history o f the p r o d u c t i o n o f this
w o r d to express an essential d i m e n s i o n o f the Church's life all along, as
text displays radically c o n f l i c t i n g visions of Catholicism. Congar t r i e d hard
Congar believed; a n e w w o r d to smuggle i n an attack o n papal supremacy, as
to make i t a m u c h stronger text, m o r e scriptural and more theological,
the likes o f B r o w n e and Fernandez feared
For Congar, the balance was
g r o u n d i n g i t i n the N e w Testament doctrine o f our f r e e d o m i n C h r i s t , and
being restored between papal p r i m a c y and episcopal collegiality — essential
so on. Eventually he gave up, deciding that any further substantial m o d i f i c a -
i f there was ever to be reconciliation w i t h the O r t h o d o x B u t this was o n l y
tions to the text-in-progress w o u l d likely end i n there b e i n g no t e x t at all
one o f the most intractable questions at Vatican I I F r o m the ultramontanist m i n o r i t y , fearful o f the implications o f the very idea of episcopal collegialiry, to the m u c h larger n u m b e r w h o v o t e d against i n c l u d i n g the text o n the V i r g i n M a r y i n the d o c u m e n t o n the C h u r c h , t h r o u g h to the stubborn resistance to successive drafts o f the text o n religious liberty, the speeches o n the f l o o r exposed the deep r i f t between t w o very different versions Catholic theology and sensibility
of
A f t e r the N a z i G e r m a n and Soviet Russian attempts to exterminate the C h u r ch, as w e l l as the i n t r o d u c t i o n o f anti-Catholic laws i n France, M e x i c o and elsewhere, something about the f r e e d o m o f the C h u r c h f r o m state c o n t r o l had to be o n the agenda. I n any case, i t was a m a j o r issue i n h e r i t e d f r o m the First Vatican C o u n c i l I t was even the major issue: the p o i n t o f Vatican I s doctrine o f papal supremacy was, i n its o w n way, equivalent to the O x f o r d Movement's resistance to erastianism i n the C h u r c h o f England, and to the D i s r u p t i o n o f 1843
2 1
MonJournal
du Conálc
I (Paris: C e r f 2 0 0 2 ) : 4 2 6 ,
Humante,
380
i n the C h u r c h o f Scotland, and parallel
movements elsewhere. Certainly, the R o m a n university theologians w h o
46
Y V E S
Y V E S
C O N G A E
47
C O N G A R
(mostly) drafted the d o c u m e n t w a n t e d a clear statement, asserting the r i g h t
denied the fact that, objectively speaking, no other r e l i g i o n but the R o m a n
o f the C h u r c h to exercise her mission, free o f c i v i l interference, i n c l u d i n g
Catholic C h u r c h had the r i g h t to propagate its doctrine; and so ,on
practical matters like f r e e d o m to r u n schools, o w n property, and so o n ,
The leading D o m i n i c a n s at the C o u n c i l w e i g h e d i n against the text.
preferably i n h a r m o n y w i t h , and indeed w i t h the support of, the state, and
A c c o r d i n g to Cardinal M i c h a e l B r o w n e , i t c o u l d n o t be approved as i t
so (tacitly) i n c l u d i n g tax relief and other such benefits
stood, since i t asserted that religious freedom is f o u n d e d o n the rights o f
Controversy heated up w h e n the bishops o f the U n i t e d States o f A m e r i c a entered the debate. O f course they sought freedom o f action f o r the C h u r c h over against the state - b u t they wanted also freedom of conscience f o r i n d i viduals They w a n t e d a clear admission that the Catholic C h u r c h officially recognized the rights o f members o f other religions to practise their faith This was an essential step f o r engagement i n the ecumenical movement, i n a
conscience, w h i c h is simply not true. A n i c e t o Fernandez, his successor as Master o f the Order, wanted a g o o d deal o f revision, arguing that the text was t o o naturalistic B o t h o f these critics, obviously, feared that the Catholic C h u r c h was being manoeuvred i n t o adopting some version o f Jefferson's belief i n the absolute
The c o n f l i c t i n g views were so intractable, as the C o u n c i l speeches show, that a decision to vote o n the text was repeatedly postponed. I n September 1964, at the t h i r d session, the U S cardinals t o o k the floor, accepting the text as i t stood at that date They d i d n o t w a n t i t sent back f o r f u r t h e r r e w r i t i n g , perhaps fearing that i t w o u l d disappear for ever. Further amendments, i f any were needed, should strengthen the Church's c o m m i t m e n t to religious
Thomas
o f private j u d g e m e n t and his
assumption that creeds were the bane and r u i n o f Christianity
2 2
The text as i t stood, at this stage, so Congar t h o u g h t , was 'premature'
religiously pluralist society l i k e that o f the U n i t e d States, so they insisted.. (The first Catholic President was elected i n 1961.)
freedom
The Catholic Church's previous p o s i t i o n about freedom i n religious matters - 'error has n o rights' — was embedded i n a history, C h r i s t e n d o m , Catholic states, and suchlike, and should certainly be abandoned Yet, he t h o u g h t , the draft replaced w h a t had been believed f o r centuries, m u c h t o o abruptly, whereas there needed to be m o r e sense o f c o n t i n u i t y T h e statement should n o t be allowed to give the impression of b e i n g a total reversal o f previous teaching.
freedom, a natural r i g h t o f every person, one of the aspects o f natural h u m a n
M u c h revised, the t e x t ( n o w i n its f o u r t h draft) r e t u r n e d to t h e bishops
freedom, and so o n , but the text should stand. W h a t they sought, i t seemed,
f o r debate i n N o v e m b e r 1964. So m u c h revision had taken place that some
was something l i k e the First A m e n d m e n t to the C o n s t i t u t i o n o f the U n i t e d
w a n t e d t i m e to reconsider i t A c c o r d i n g l y , the praesidium decreed that dis-
States (1791): 'Congress shall make n o law respecting an establishment of
cussion w o u l d be deferred u n t i l the f o u r t h (and everyone h o p e d final)
religion, or p r o h i b i t i n g the free exercise t h e r e o f . N o C h u r c h - however
session o f the C o u n c i l A t this, the U S bishops were outraged - t h e c o n f i -
' t r u e ' - w o u l d ever be granted p r i v i l e g e d status b y the state; no religious
dence o f the entire C h r i s t i a n and n o n - C h r i s t i a n w o r l d i n the Catholic
b o d y - however- bizar re - was to be prevented b y the state f r o m w o r s h i p p i n g
C h u r c h w o u l d be f o r f e i t , i f there were any f u r t h e r delay over w h a t seemed
G o d o r propagating its teachings i n whatever way i t chose
to the Americans
M a n y Europeans c o u l d n o t stomach this. For one t h i n g , they d i d n o t see w h y w h a t Catholics believe should be tempered i n any way to relieve a n x i eties o n the part o f others. As regards f r e e d o m to practise one's r e l i g i o n itself, Cardinal O t t a v i a n i , i n effect speaking f o r the H o l y Office, o f w h i c h he was still the Prefect, argued that the text w o u l d be saying n o t h i n g n e w no one is to be coerced i n religious matters, as the Catholic C h u r c h has always recognized Nonetheless there needed to be an explicit affirmation o f the p r i m a r y r i g h t to religious freedom, i n the proper sense o f ' r i g h t ' , w h i c h belongs, objectively, to those w h o are members o f the one true revealed r e l i g i o n Moreover, the rights o f the true r e l i g i o n are based, he argued, n o t o n merely natural rights, b u t o n the rights w h i c h f l o w f r o m revelation.
a perfectly straightforward and simple m a t t e r : do
Catholics believe i n f r e e d o m o f conscience o r not? P a n d e m o n i u m broke o u t o n the C o u n c i l f l o o r ; Paul V I , w a t c h i n g o n closed-circuit television, telephoned the secretary general t o come to h i m at once, the Americans started to gather signatures for a p e t i t i o n — i n vain: the pope decided to leave the decision u n t i l the f o u r t h session, guaranteeing i t w o u l d be first on the agenda For this reason, a m o n g others, the t h i r d session c o n c l u d e d , on 21 N o v e m b e r 1964, w i t h a g r i m - f a c e d Paul V I being carried o n the sedia geitatoria
o u t o f the basilica t h r o u g h tiers o f stony-faced bishops, whose
lack o f enthusiasm, so uncharacteristic of such events, testified t o the seriousness o f the impasse over several issues, at this p o i n t i n the h i s t o r y of Vatican I I
Two eminent Spanish bishops were m u c h less sympathetic: the text was totally unacceptable, i t appeared to favour u n i o n w i t h the separated brethren, it endorsed the 'liberalism' w h i c h the C h u r c h had so often condemned, i t
1 2
Mon Journal
du Concile I I (Paris: C e r f 2 0 0 2 ) : 157,
162
48
Y V E S
Y V E S
C O N G A R
49
C O N G A R
The reason f o r d e f e r r i n g the vote once again was simply that the pope
concepts o f development and historicity, the long-resisted obvious fact that
and the inner circle o f his advisors feared that there w o u l d be as many as 800
institutions change over t i m e and that interpretations of events and texts also
votes against the text, o u t o f 2,300, m u c h t o o significant a m i n o r i t y W h a t
change, the implications f o r the C h u r c h , and f o r Scripture, were still to be
w o u l d i t l o o k like, to the outside w o r l d , i f the Catholic C h u r c h were to
faced
endorse religious l i b e r t y b u t w i t h one i n three o f the bishops against it?
some cases n o t even discussed
M o r e anguishing for Paul V I , w h a t w o u l d i t feel like, f o r o r d i n a r y Catholics
marriages, penitential discipline, and indulgences.
the w o r l d over, to discover h o w d i v i d e d the C h u r c h was? H e sought as
presbyteral; the place o f w o m e n i n the C h u r c h ; h o w priests are p a i d ; h o w
m u c h consensus as possible, b u t , l i k e other observers at the t i m e , he had n o
bishops are appointed; the r e f o r m o f the papal C u r i a and o f tides and p o m p
illusions about the deep and b i t t e r c o n f l i c t between t w o radically different
— a somewhat heterogeneous agenda o f unfinished business. Yet, he had no
T h i r d , major ethical and practical issues were n o t decided, and i n These issues i n c l u d e d contraception, m i x e d 25
ministries o t h e r than
doubt, flawed and compromised as Vatican IPs ' r e f o r m ' o f the C h u r c h was, i t
versions o f Catholic C h r i s t i a n i t y I n February 1965, w h i l e w o r k i n g o n the text to be presented at the final session, Congar regarded the draft as simply t o o optimistic - the drafting
was m u c h greater than he or anyone else c o u l d have i m a g i n e d i n the dark days o f the 1950s.
c o m m i t t e e lacked the benefit o f having opponents a m o n g t h e m w h o w o u l d oblige t h e m to compromise, instead o f just celebrating w h a t he calls their 'euphoric u n a n i m i t y '
2 3
H e even w i s h e d that Cardinal M i c h a e l B r o w n e ,
and t w o other stalwart adversaries
Reception and
Re-reception
o f everything he wanted f r o m the
C o u n c i l had been o n the commission
I n M a y 1965 he confided to his
I n 1972 Congar published a l a n d m a r k essay o n the theological concept of
j o u r n a l that w h i l e the Declaration w o u l d reduce fears o f the Catholic
'reception': the way i n w h i c h the Gospel is received and understood by the
C h u r c h , yet i t w o u l d also v e r y likely encourage i n d i f f e r e n t i s m i n religious
Church
matters a m o n g Catholics. Indeed, he predicted, i t was likely to encourage
2 6
T h e t e r m is not to be f o u n d i n the relevant v o l u m e o f the
Dktionnaire
the idea that the norms o f morality, standards i n ethical conduct, and so o n ,
theologique catholique, the p r i n c i p a l French authority, unsurprisingly since i t
reside i n people's b e i n g sincere and h a v i n g g o o d intentions, rather than i n
came out i n 1951. The Oxford Dictionary
anything o b j e c t i v e .
n o entry either; whereas i n the 1997 e d i t i o n , the t e r m receives a dozen
24
I n the end, w h e n they voted o n 19 N o v e m b e r 1965, o f the 2,216 C o u n c i l
of the Christian Church (1957) has
lines, w i t h n o bibliography: Anglicans and O r t h o d o x have
emphasized
members present, 1,954 v o t e d i n favour, 249 against, and 13 votes were
'reception' i n recent times, w e are t o l d , but the d e f i n i t i o n o f papal a u t h o r i t y
invalid - w h i c h was, o f course, a decision by far m o r e than the required t w o -
l e d to its being comparatively neglected by C a t h o l i c s .
27
thirds m a j o r i t y Nonetheless a hard core o f opponents remained The history o f the p r o d u c t i o n o f the d o c u m e n t o n f r e e d o m o f r e l i g i o n convinced Yves Congar that the achievement o f the C o u n c i l c o u l d never have been completely satisfactory, i n the sense o f satisfying everyone
He
saw the deep and bitter differences w i t h i n Catholic t h e o l o g y and piety, and sensibility I n 1965 he listed problems that were never seriously engaged w i t h at all There was a gap between biblical scholars and theologians; no one should be awarded a higher degree i n Catholic theology, he suggested, unless they have published some w o r t h w h i l e w o r k o n the Bible, a pretty d a u n t i n g requirement. Integrating m o d e r n biblical studies w i t h d o c t r i n e w o u l d be one o f the major problems to come. Second, w h i l e Vatican I I admitted the
2
^
V i s i t o r s t o c h u r c h e s i n c e r t a i n C a t h o l i c c o u n t r i e s are o f t e n s u r p r i s e d t o f i n d t h a t i n d u l -
gences, the p r a c t i c e b y w h i c h t h e C h u r c h r e m i t s the t e m p o r a l p e n a l t y due t o f o r g i v e n sin i n v i r t u e o f t h e m e r i t s o f C h r i s t a n d t h e saints E n c h i r i d i o n Indulgentiarum
remains i n o p e r a t i o n ; t h e latest e d i t i o n o f the
i n c l u d e s a n e w p l e n a r y i n d u l g e n c e g r a n t e d f o r p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n the
W e e k o f Prayer f o r C h r i s t i a n U n i t y 2 6
'La
' réception"
Théologiques 2 7
comme
réalité
ecclésiologique'
Revue
des
Sciences
Philosophiques
T h e F a i t h a n d O r d e r C o n s u l t a t i o n at L o u v a i n i n 1 9 7 1 spoke o f r e c e p t i o n as ' t h e process
b y w h i c h t h e l o c a l churches accept t h e d e c i s i o n o f a c o u n c i l and t h e r e b y recognize its a u t h o r i t y T h i s process is a m u l t i p l e x o n e a n d m a y last f o r c e n t u r i e s .
. t h e process o f r e c e p t i o n
c o n t i n u e s i n s o m e w a y o r o t h e r as l o n g as t h e churches are i n v o l v e d i n s e l f - e x a m i n a t i o n o n t h e basis o f w h e t h e r a p a r t i c u l a r c o u n c i l has b e e n r e c e i v e d a n d a p p r o p r i a t e d p r o p e r l y a n d w i t h j u s t i f i c a t i o n I n this sense
i n t h e e c u m e n i c a l m o v e m e n t t h e c h u r c h e s find themselves i n a
process o f c o n t i n u i n g r e c e p t i o n o r r e - r c c e p t i o n o f t h e c o u n c i l s ' , see The Dictionary Journal
11:329
I b i d : 370
et
56 ( 1 9 7 2 ) : 3 6 9 - 4 0 3
menical Movement 1991). s v
e d i t e d b y N i c h o l a s L o s s k y et al
'Reception
(Geneva: W o r l d C o u n c i l o f
of the EcuChurches
50
Y V E S
Y V E S
C O N G A R
Congar means the w h o l e process b y w h i c h the C h u r c h accepts and i n -
51
C O N G A R
i n the process o f reception' being played by 'the response of the f a i t h f u l '
tegrates i n t o her life this or that d o c t r i n a l decision, l i t u r g i c a l r e f o r m , or
(§16) - w h i c h implants the concept o f reception, very m u c h i n Congar's
whatever. The C h u r c h is inherently receptive: she exists o n l y i n v i r t u e o f
terms. I n an i m p o r t a n t text (though o f course n o t authoritative i n either the
receiving the H o l y Spirit ( John 20:22; Acts 1:8)
A n g l i c a n C o m m u n i o n o r the Catholic C h u r c h ) , The Gift of Authority,
The C h u r c h teaches w h a t
she has received, n o t w h a t is invented o r discovered (1 Cor. 11:23; 15:3).
the
A g r e e d Statement by A R C I C (1999), we even hear of 're-reception':
Even i f the faith 'has been delivered to the saints once and f o r all' (Jude 3),
Even though promised the assistance of the H o l y Spirit, the churches from time to time lose sight o f aspects of the apostolic Tradition, failing to discern the full vision o f the kingdom of God i n the light o f which we seek to follow Christ. . Fresh recourse to Tradition i n a new situation is the means by which God's revelation i n Christ is recalled The insights o f biblical scholars and theologians and the wisdom of holy persons assist this. Thus, there may be a rediscovery of elements that were neglected and a fresh remembrance of the promises of God, leading to renewal of the Church's 'Amen' There may also be a sifting of what has been received because some o f the formulations of the Tradition are seen to be inadequate or even misleading i n a new context This whole process may be term re-reception
reception does n o t cease: the Spirit keeps leading the C h u r c h m o r e deeply ' i n t o the t r u t h ' (John 16:13).. The reception o f this or that doctrinal decision, then, needs to be situated i n the context o f this o n g o i n g reception o f the Gospel. The C h u r c h as a w h o l e receives the t r u t h , n o t this or that element i n the C h u r c h , such as the bishops (say).. Thus the reception o f the doctrine o f the C o u n c i l o f C h a l cedon (451), f o r example, is to be f o u n d not o n l y i n the teaching o f the subsequent councils b u t i n h y m n o d y , prayers, icons, a w h o l e spirituality. R e c e p t i o n o f doctrine, i n this sense, is an 'ecclesiological reality', as Congar calls i t : a reality w h i c h goes far beyond accepting certain propositions.
2 9
Moreover, historically, the reception o r assimilation o f a d o c t r i n e defined at a C o u n c i l has n o t always been immediate o r unanimous.. A f t e r Nicaea
Conclusion
(325) i t t o o k decades for the C h u r c h to receive the doctrine defined then. Indeed, formulations have been rejected, as Chalcedon was b y m u c h o f the Eastern C h u r c h - hence the existence o f the O r i e n t a l O r t h o d o x C h u r ches..
M u c h that Yves Congar stood for, and suffered for, passed i n t o Catholic
F u r t h e r m o r e , a doctrine is never received once and f o r all.. Absorbed i n t o
d o c t r i n e at Vatican I I . T h a t does n o t mean, however, that all his theological
the existing b o d y o f doctrine, i t necessarily affects all the rest. R e c e p t i o n is a
ideas are n o w history W i t h the concept o f reception - and of re-reception -
permanent process W e m i g h t speak o f 're-reception', Congar says. For
Congar opened questions and possibilities, w h i c h we have barely begun
example, i n the l i g h t of Vatican I I o n collegiahty, there cannot b u t be a re-
to c o n f r o n t .
30
reception o f Vatican I o n papal p r i m a c y This does n o t mean abandonment of the dogma, as i f i t were n o w redundant; n o r does i t mean revision, as i f i t were mistaken Rather, a d o c t r i n e l o n g held simply begins to l o o k different i n the context of a n e w l y promulgated doctrine — that is w h a t Congar means. The t e r m 'reception' is m a k i n g its w a y slowly I n the A n g l i c a n - R o m a n Catholic A g r e e d Statement Authority
in the Church (19 7 7 ) ,
28
the way is p r e -
pared i n phrases such as the C h r i s t i a n community's being 'enabled by the H o l y Spirit to live o u t the gospel and so to be led i n t o all t r u t h ' ; its b e i n g 'given the capacity to assess its faith and life' (§2); its having to 'respond to and assess the insights and teachings o f the ordained ministers'; i n a ' c o n t i n u i n g process o f discernment and response' (§6); t o 'the r e c o g n i t i o n and reception o f conciliar decisions and disciplinary decisions', 'a substantial part 2 9
2 8
Authority
Commission
in the Church : An Agreed
Statement by the Anglican—Roman
( L o n d o n : Catholic T r u t h Society
1977)
Catholic
International
The Gift of Authority
(Authority
Catholic International
Commission
See Yves Congar
Theologian
3 ( 1
w i t h g o o d bibliography.
m the Church
III) : An Agreed
Statement by the A
nglican-Roman
( L o n d o n : C a t h o l i c T r u t h Society 1 9 9 9 ) : (§25) of the Church,
e d i t e d b y G a b r i e l F l y n n ( L o u v a i n : Peeters 2005),
E D W A R D
Chapter Four
53
S C H I L I E B E E C K X
were overshadowed by the G e r m a n occupation o f B e l g i u m . H e received a classical education at a Jesuit school, f o r w h i c h he had t o learn to speak French. (Flemish was n o t p e r m i t t e d i n Belgian schools and universities ) His
EDWARD
decision n o t to f o l l o w an older b r o t h e r i n t o the Society o f Jesus was made
SCHILLEBEECKX
entered the D o m i n i c a n O r d e r i n 1934. H e read the mystics, taking the stan-
after he read H u m b e r t Clerissac's L'Esprit
de Saint Dominique
(1924). H e
dard D o m i n i c a n line: mysticism is the life o f v i r t u e and devotion directed towards G o d , w h i c h the H o l y Spirit grants to all believers, quite distinct f r o m episodic religious 'experiences', or a n y t h i n g essentially 'abnormal'. As a novice he added the name o f H e n r i c u s t o the f o u r he already had, i n h o n o u r o f H e n r y Suso (c. 1295—1366), the G e r m a n D o m i n i c a n spiritual writer. Tike Congar, Schillebeeckx eventually dropped his religious name
5
L i k e all Belgian seminarians, Schillebeeckx d i d m i l i t a r y service, i n a barW h i l e he regarded liimself as a theologian i n the historico-contextualist school o f his older D o m i n i c a n colleagues C h e n u and Congar, E d w a r d Schillebeeckx was always far m o r e sensitive to philosophical questions than either o f t h e m The D o m i n i c a n p r i o r y at Touvain, by his day, was no longer an enclave o f pure Thomistic p h i l o s o p h y Y o u n g Schillebeeckx was taught 1
racks reserved f o r student priests, rabbis and pastors, passing the year reading Husserl, Heidegger and M e r l e a u - P o n t y Recalled to the a r m y i n O c t o b e r 1939 he was never i n v o l v e d i n fighting. W h e n the B e l g i a n government capitulated i n M a y 1940 he r e t u r n e d to L o u v a i n where he pursued his four years of theological studies, virtually undisturbed by the war. I n 1942, however, D e Petter was replaced as R e g e n t , part o f the w i d e r
b y D o m i n i c u s D e Petter, w h o was b y then w o r k i n g o u t a synthesis of 2
Thomas Aquinas and c o n t e m p o r a r y p h e n o m e n o l o g i c a l and personalist
campaign b y the D o m i n i c a n authorities i n R o m e to eradicate ' m o d e r n i s m '
philosophy, m a i n t a i n i n g that i n o u r experiential k n o w l e d g e o f entities w e
D e Petter's talk o f ' i n t u i t i o n o f b e i n g ' seemed to t u r n T h o m i s t realism into
have an immediate i n t u i t i o n o f being H e was particularly interested i n p h e -
some f o r m o f subjectivist idealism. This crisis affected Schillebeeckx all the
nomenology, Husserl and problems o f the i n t e n t i o n a l i t y o f consciousness
m o r e because he discovered sympathies w i t h N a z i ideology i n some o f Karl
F r o m the outset, this directed Schillebeeckx away f r o m a n y t h i n g that Gar-
Adam's early w o r k Put o n to reading A d a m b y D e Petter, precisely as an
rigou-Lagrange c o u l d have recognized as T h o m i s m
alternative to 'rationalist' n e o t h o m i s t fears o f the place o f 'experience' i n
E d w a r d Cornells Florent A l f o n s Schillebeeckx was b o r n o n 12 N o v e m 3
ber 1914, sixth o f w h a t w o u l d be 14 children, i n a devout middle-class Flemish f a m i l y . H e g r e w up i n K o r t e n b e r g , an o l d t o w n i n Brabant. H i s 4
father w o r k e d as an accountant for the Belgian government. H i s early years
Catholic theology, he f o u n d that Adam's Tübingen School emphasis on 'life', ' c o m m u n i t y ' , 'das V o l k ' , and so o n , exposed h i m to the charms of Nazism
I n ' N a t u r e and Supernature', Schillebeeckx developed his o w n
understanding o f the orientation o f h u m a n nature towards G o d , against Karl Adam's use o f the supposedly T h o m i s t i c t h e o r e m 'grace perfects nature' to justify Catholic Christian collaboration (up to a point) w i t h Nazism
1
As i t n o d o u b t was
i n t h e heyday o f the l e g e n d a r y A n t o n i n u s -
M . Dummermuth
( 1 8 4 1 - 1 9 1 8 ) , i n f l e x i b l y anti-Jesuit d e f e n d e r o f t h e T h o m i s t d o c t r i n e o f physical p r e m o t i o n , a n d t h e equally m e m o r a b l e M a r c o l i n u s — M
Tuyaerts (1878—1948), w h o believed m o s t solutions t o
questions a d o p t e d b y T h o m a s A q u i n a s c o u l d be t u r n e d i n t o d e n n e d dogmas o f t h e C h u r c h . Dominicus De
2
Petter ( 1 9 0 5 - 7 1 ) t r a i n e d at t h e I n s t i t u t S u p é r i e u r de P h i l o s o p h i e
at
L o u v a i n f o u n d e d by Cardinal M e r c i e r 3
I f E d w a r d spelled t h u s , seems an u n u s u a l n a m e f o r a B e l g i a n i t goes b a c k t o the M i d d l e
Ages w h e n E n g l i s h i n f l u e n c e was s t r o n g i n Flanders 4
F o r d e t a i l see E r i k B o r g m a n , Edward
Catholic
Theology
of Culture
K e n n e d y O R Schillebeeckx by R o b e r t ] Theologian
(Î914-1965)
Schillebeeckx:
A Theologian
in His History,
As soon as the war ended, Schillebeeckx w e n t to Paris t o w o r k o n a doctoral dissertation o n faith and culture, effectively a variant o f the grace/ nature theme, at the p o n t i f i c a l faculties o f Te Saulchoir. As so often happens in D o m i n i c a n life, however, he was soon recalled to L o u v a i n to teach dogmatic theology, l o n g before he was properly qualified to d o so. I n his year i n Paris, Schillebeeckx t o o k courses at Le Saulchoir (Yves Congar among
vol. I : A
( L o n d o n and N e w Y o r k : C o n t i n u u m 2003); P h i l i p
( L o n d o n : G e o f f r e y C h a p m a n 1 9 9 3 ) ; The
Schillebeeckx
Reader, e d i t e d
S c h r e i t e r ( N e w Y o r k : Crossroad 1 9 8 4 ) ; a n d E d w a r d S c h i l l e b e e c k x . I Am a Conversations
6
with Francesco Slrazzari
( L o n d o n : S C P Press 1994)
Happy
71
I n his first p u b l i c a t i o n s , as De sacramentele
Hcilseconomie
Schillebeeckx 6
S u m m a r i z e d b y B o r g m a n . Schillebeeckx:
56-9
(1952) h e appears as H e n r i c u s
54
E D W A R D
S C H I L
I E B E E C K X
E D W A R D
S C H I I
55
I E B E E C K X
others), at the Sorbonne ( R e n é Le Senne, Louis Lavelle, Jean Wahl), the
clash b e h i n d the scenes between Schillebeeckx, the Flemish D o m i n i c a n , and
É c o l e des Hautes Études (Chenu) and the Collège de France (Gilson)
the D u t c h Jesuit Sebastian T f o m p (1889-1975), famous i n the Netherlands
7
The
dissertation came to n o t h i n g
for his role i n enforcing the dismissal i n the mid-1950s of seminary professors
I n 1952, however, he published De sacraméntele heilseconomie, 'theological
sympathetic to the so-called ' n e w theology', signalled the move f r o m a
reflection o n St Thomas's d o c t r i n e o f the sacraments i n the l i g h t o f t r a d i t i o n
deeply traditional, ultramontane Catholicism to the 'progressive liberalism'
and o f m o d e r n problems about the sacraments', the first v o l u m e o f an exten-
w i t h w h i c h D u t c h Catholics were to become identified i n the immediately
sive investigation o f the tradition that was to f o r m the basis o f a synthesis,
post-Vatican I I years (This conflict between Catholic sensibilities and con-
never completed, e x p o u n d i n g the sacraments as celebrations, expressions,
victions i n the Netherlands has never been resolved.) Immediately after
o f the Christian faith i n all its fullness
Vatican I I Schillebeeckx devoted a great deal o f energy to spreading his ideas
This massive b o o k -
700 pages —
was the product of t w o lecture courses o n the sacraments. The historical-
about the Council's achievement
contextualist approach to Thomas Aquinas, characteristic o f C h e n u , and the
g r o u n d , i n r e t h i n k i n g classical Christology i n the light o f historical-critical
t r a w l i n g t h r o u g h patristic and medieval scholastic literature as practised by
biblical studies. H e retired i n 1983 t o w o r k o n the sacraments
Increasingly, however, he b r o k e new
Congar, are very evident - w h i l e the interest i n phenomenological p h i l osophy already indicates the conditions f o r Schillebeeckx to develop his o w n distinctive approach. This b o o k earned h i m the doctorate at Le Saulchoir.
Delations
F r o m 1946 to 1957 Schillebeeckx taught dogmatic t h e o l o g y to y o u n g friars i n the D o m i n i c a n study house at L o u v a i n As a m e m b e r o f a religious
Lecture tours, especially i n the U n i t e d States, stimulated Schillebeeckx's
order, he c o u l d n o t have had a chair at the Catholic U n i v e r s i t y o f L o u v a i n
t h i n k i n g i n many respects John Robinson's Honest to God, the so-called
I n 1958 he was sounded out about a chair at the U n i v e r s i t y o f N i j m e g e n
'God-is-dead' theologians, and suchlike, confronted Christian theology w i t h
The Flemish D o m i n i c a n s , at first refusing to let h i m go, w i t h d r e w their
very fundamental questions, he believed, w i t h w h i c h he sought to grapple
objections w h e n , w i t h his connivance, appeal was made to the Master o f the
by d r a w i n g o n 'critical t h e o r y ' (the Frankfurt School, Jiirgen Habermas),
Order, M i c h a e l B r o w n e , w h o decreed that he should take up the offer o f
hermenéutica! philosophy (Paul R i c o e u r , Hans G e o r g Gadamer) and to
this prestigious chair. Ironically, three or f o u r years later, B r o w n e was one o f
some extent anglophone linguistic philosophy. W h i l e certainly seeing
the leaders of the m i n o r i t y (as they t u r n e d o u t to be, m u c h to their surprise)
Vatican I I as a breakthrough, he predicted, i n 1964, that the Council's deci-
at Vatican I I , p i t t e d against Schillebeeckx, by t h e n the 'progressive' in-house
sions w o u l d rapidly become outdated for Catholics i n the Netherlands,
theologian o f the D u t c h bishops
b e i n g far t o o ambiguous and anodyne to speak to the adversaries i n the
"When he got to N i j m e g e n , Schillebeeckx f o u n d Catholic theology i n the Netherlands 'almost non-existent': that is to say, adhering to the n o n -
stormy conflicts already o c c u r r i n g After 1970,
as the m u t u a l hostility
between the Vatican and many D u t c h Catholics over liturgy, m i n i s t r y and
historical approach i n neoscholastic I h o m i s m and avoiding dialogue w i t h
c h u r c h organization, m i r e d d o w n i n t o an impasse, and the 'progressive'
current philosophy Never an official peritus at Vatican I I , blocked by the
bishops were gradually replaced b y loyal ultramontanists, Schillebeeckx
H o l y Office, t h o u g h the Cardinal Archbishop o f U t r e c h t ( A l f r i n k ) asked
t u r n e d away i n t o an entirely unprecedented project for a Catholic theo-
t w i c e that he be appointed, Schillebeeckx, since he was n o t b o u n d by the
logian: classical C h r i s t o l o g y needed
oath o f confidentiality required of 'experts', was fr ee to influence o p i n i o n as
'scientific' historical c r i t i c i s m of Scripture. Schillebeeckx immersed himself
the bishops f r o m all over the w o r l d f o u n d their feet H e lectured attractively
i n the secondary literature i n G e r m a n , French and English H i s research
i n English, he alluded to ideas i n the secret drafts, c r i t i c i z i n g t h e m and
issued i n a trilogy, Jezus,
sketching alternatives. Advised p r i n c i p a l l y by Schillebeeckx, the bishops o f
Liefde (197 7) and Mensen als verhaal van God (1989)
the Netherlands had a u n i t e d and often decisive voice at the C o u n c i l . The
7
I b i d : 103: S c h i l l e b e e c k x f o u n d C o n g a r
closed, w i t h d r a w n a n d i m p a t i e n t ' : ' W h e n l e c t u r -
i n g , C o n g a r seemed d i s t a n t t i r e d d u l l ' (this i n 1945—6); w h e r e a s C h e n u was 'a n a t u r a l t a l e n t w i t h a d e l i g h t i n life
to be
rethought i n the l i g h t
het verhaal van een levende (1974), Gerechtigheid
of
en
s
T h e first v o l u m e was delated to R o m e b y fellow theologians w h o no
8
Jesus: An Experiment
in the Modern
in Christology
( L o n d o n : C o l l i n s 1 9 7 9 ) ; Christ:
World ( L o n d o n : S C M Press 1 9 8 0 ) ; Church:
S C M Press 1990).
The Human
The Christian Story oj God
Experience (London:
56
E D W A R D
E D W A R D
S C H I L I E B E E C K X
57
S C H I I I E B E E C K X
d o u b t believed that he was t o o close to the D u t c h bishops f o r them, to curb
appointed was required b y c h u r c h law, but the justice required b y natural
his w o r k . T h o u g h never forced o u t o f teaching or f o r b i d d e n to publish, he
law t o o k priority. ' M y conscience t o l d me t o make a m e n t a l reservation',
had several colloquies w i t h officials at the C o n g r e g a t i o n f o r the D o c t r i n e o f
R a h n e r t o l d Schillebeeckx
the F a i t h .
1 0
Delated as soon as i t appeared, Schillebeeckx's Jesus raised quite serious
9
Influential figures i n the Vatican had been angered f o r years, especially b y
problems. B y this t i m e the Congregation rules were changed, enabling the
Schillebeeckx's influence at the C o u n c i l . As everyone knew, the brochure
accused to defend himself! H e replied i n w r i t i n g to one request f r o m the
published by the D u t c h bishops i n 1961 -
on
Congregation to clarify (1) the preference for certain schools of b i b l i c a l exe-
the Council - was drafted b y Schillebeeckx.. I h e text speaks, most unset-
gesis; (2) the implications for the history of Jesus and particularly for his resur-
t l i n g l y f o r anyone o f ultramontanist inclinations, o f ' p a p a l i n f a l l i b i l i t y [as]
rection; and (3) the implications f o r the doctrines of the Incarnation, the
The Bishops of the Netherlands
also i n v o l v e d i n the ministerial i n f a l l i b i l i t y o f the w o r l d episcopate' (bad
Tr inity, the v i r g i n a l conception o f Jesus and the f o u n d a t i o n of the C h u r c h
enough!), t h e n goes o n to m a i n t a i n that 'the ministerial i n f a l l i b i l i t y o f the
Eventually, i n December 1979, i n R o m e , over t w o and a half days, Schille-
w o r l d episcopate' i n its t u r n is 'also b o r n e up by the infallible faith o f the
beeckx answered questions p u t to h i m by three Congregation theologians:
w h o l e o f the c o m m u n i t y o f f a i t h ' Each bishop was g o i n g to the C o u n c i l as
A l b e r t Descamps, a distinguished biblical scholar f r o m Touvain, an o l d friend
'the voice o f the w h o l e c o m m u n i t y o f faith f o r w h i c h he is responsible'
(T a m here as an exegete and not as a dogmatic theologian'), w h o had already
This, and m u c h else i n the brochure, l o o k e d l i k e an attempt to revise the
reviewed the b o o k , critically but respectfully; A l b e r t Patfoort O P , the epitome
dogma of papal i n f a l l i b i l i t y b y locating infalhbility i n the faith o f the w h o l e
of mainstream D o m i n i c a n T h o m i s m , then l e c t u r i n g at the A n g e l i c u m , i n n o -
c o m m u n i t y Such ideas sounded u n c a n n i l y like the heresies eliminated at
cent o f any other theology or philosophy apart f r o m Aquinas s (he asked
Vatican I , n o t to m e n t i o n w h a t George Tyrrell was suggesting i n his reply to
Schillebeeckx to explain hermeneutics); and Jean Galot sj, another Belgian,
Cardinal M e r r i e r
L o u v a i n trained, l e c t u r i n g at the Gregorianum, and already an internationally
I n 1967 the little b o o k Schillebeeckx published, no d o u b t to prepare people f o r the expected abandonment o f the requirement o f celibacy f o r clergy i n the Latin r ite (Clerical Celibacy under Fire: A Critical Appraisal
1968),
was delated to the Vatican by a w e l l - k n o w n D o m i n i c a n scholar I n 1968, K a r l R a h n e r telephoned Schillebeeckx to say that he had been appointed to defend h i m before the officials o f the C o n g r e g a t i o n for the D o c t r i n e o f the Faith. H e mailed the dossier: copies o f i n t e r v i e w s given to newspapers i n the U n i t e d States.. The issue was Schillebeeckx's statement about 'secularization' (it was t h o u g h t at the t i m e that r e l i g i o n was o n the wane) O n 24 September 1968 he Monde disclosed that the C o n g r e g a t i o n was investigating Schillebeeckx ' o n suspicion of heresy' Since he himself was supposed to k n o w n o t h i n g o f the investigation, and all other parties
k n o w n dogmatic theologian o n the distinctly 'conservative'wing ( u n f o r t u nately he chose to display a newspaper photograph of Schillebeeckx preachi n g at the marriage o f a priest i n a D u t c h parish, and had to be b r o u g h t to order by the neutral chairman f o r this irrelevance)
T h e c o l l o q u i u m was
m o u n t e d , as the rules said, i n an 'ecclesial spirit of respect and m u t u a l trust'; certainly every effort seems to have been made to assemble theologians f a m i l iar w i t h the L o w Countries (Patfoort was a F l e m i n g f r o m Lille.) I n the event, on 20 N o v e m b e r 1980, Schillebeeckx received a letter f r o m the Congregat i o n i n v i t i n g h i m to clarify some points and remove some ambiguities — stating, however, that w h i l e some questions remained open o n matters w h i c h are n o t i n accord w i t h the doctrine o f the C h u r c h , they were in accord w i t h the faith. There was no ' c o n d e m n a t i o n '
were s w o r n to silence, the C o n g r e g a t i o n officials were i n f u r i a t e d . R a h n e r was s u m m o n e d to the Vatican, interrogated f o r three hours by Archbishop Paul Philippe O P (1905-84), o n behalf o f the Congregation. R a h n e r repeat-
T h o m i s m Revised
edly denied telling Schillebeeckx - and eventually Philippe apologized R a h n e r believed that he had to speak to the accused, whatever the C o n g r e gation rules prescribed — the oath of secrecy w h i c h he had s w o r n w h e n
9
Set
Edward
The Schillebeeckx Schillebeeckx
Case: Official Exchange
of Letters
OP by the Sacred Congregation
Ted S c h o o f O P ( N e w Y o r k ; Paulist.
1984)
and Documents
for the Doctrine
in the Investigation
of the Faith
1976-1980,
ofFr ed
For three years Schillebeeckx attended courses o n Thomistic p h i l o s o p h y i n c l u d i n g by D e Petter, w i t h o u t actually reading texts o f Thomas Aquinas
1 0
F o r d i e w h o l e s t o r y see S c h i l l e b e e c k x
I Am
a Happy
Theologian:
32-4
Kar! Lehmann
t h e n R a h n e r ' s assistant, n o w C a r d i n a l A r c h b i s h o p o£ M a i n z h a d the task o f r e a d i n g t h e dossier a n d d r a f t i n g R a h n e r ' s speech
58
E D W A R D
S C H U L
E B E E C K X
E D W A R D
S C H I I L E B E E C K X
59
I n the f o u r years o f theology, he and his companions d i d read Aquinas,
concepts were treated as i f they were eternal; as i f they had n o history This is
t h o u g h completely unhistorically They read n o t h i n g apart f r o m the Summa
very m u c h Chenu's critique o f Garrigou-Lagrange's approach.
Theologies, paying little attention to the historical o r narrative context o f whichever section they had before them.
I n Jesus Schillebeeckx explicitly breaks w i t h the religious epistemology taught by D e Petter H e n o w rejects the w h o l e idea o f i m p l i c i t intuitive
I n 1 9 3 7 - 8 Schillebeeckx u n d e r t o o k a project under D e Petter's super-
participation i n being, the w h o l e o f meaning, allegedly, manifest o r anyway
vision to consider w h e t h e r k n o w l e d g e is conceptual o r includes a n o n -
i n t u i t i v e l y discoverable i n every particular experience o f meaning.. This
conceptual element. The question was about h o w G o d comes to be k n o w n
was a b r i l l i a n t development of Thomas Aquinas, he allows I n Aquinas's
-
conceptually, i n t u i t i v e l y o r experientially Against neoscholastic p h i l -
day, moreover, w h e n i t was a self-evident t r u t h that h u m a n beings had a
osophy, w h i c h evidently favoured an ahistorical system o f concepts, so i t was
single destiny - the beatific vision - and there was a range of 'appropriate
t h o u g h t , this was o p e n i n g the possibility of a certain
non-conceptual
plausibility-structures' i n place to sustain i t , Aquinas's theology was i n place,
element. D u r i n g his m i l i t a r y service he read the n e w l y published Geist in
incontestably For us, now, however, i n a society i n w h i c h divergent i d e o l o -
Welt b y K a r l R a h n e r As w e shall see, Balthasar, w i t h his b o o k o n t r u t h , and
gies and outlooks compete i n the market o f w o r l d history, so Schillebeeckx
Lonergan, w i t h his b o o k Insight,
also felt the need to s u r m o u n t the
contends, the idea o f o u r p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n a simply given structure o f being
neoscholastic t h e o r y of k n o w l e d g e that they i n h e r i t e d W i t h many o f their
has n o purchase whatsoever. W h e r e w e have to start is w i t h the idea of
contemporaries i n R e f o r m e d and A n g l i c a n theology, t h o u g h i n almost total
anticipating a total meaning i n the history w e are always still m a k i n g
ignorance of their w o r k , this generation o f Catholic theologians felt c o m pelled to deal w i t h questions i n religious epistemology, and i n particular to challenge w h a t they t o o k to be a merely conceptualist approach..
T h e Jesus B o o k
F r o m the outset, w h e n he e x p o u n d e d Aquinas's theology t o y o u n g D o m i n i c a n friars i n L o u v a i n , Schillebeeckx insisted o n c o n t e x t u a l i z i n g
H i t h e r t o , Catholic expositions o f C h r i s t o l o g y began f r o m the doctrines
concepts i n t h e i r genesis, o f f e r i n g a historical reading, t a k i n g i n t o consid-
defined at the C o u n c i l o f Chalcedon i n 451 ('two natures i n one person')
eration the patristic sources and the t w e l f t h - c e n t u r y 'Masters'. H e believed
The celebration i n 1951
that the most i m p o r t a n t decisions i n the h i s t o r y o f theology were made
Rahner, a m o n g other Catholic theologians, t o contemplate the possibility
i n the t w e l f t h and n o t i n the t h i r t e e n t h century — an insight n o d o u b t
o f a renewal o f Catholic Christology, but the fears articulated b y Pope
f r o m C h e n u W h e n he w e n t to N i j m e g e n his predecessor Gerard K r e l i n g
Pius X I I , however, i n the same year, i n his encyclical Humani
advised h i m to b e g i n w i t h the de Deo uno, the course o n God's existence,
damped enthusiasm for radically n e w developments. B y 1970, however, for
nature and attributes t h e n assumed to be the dogmatician's f a v o u r i t e topic
Schillebeeckx a m o n g many others, i t no longer seemed possible to expound
K r e l i n g was a great
authentically
C h r i s t o l o g y solely o n the basis o f the classical creeds and conciliar d e f i n i -
T h o m i s t , b u t i n the sense o f 'pure scholasticism w i t h o u t the historical
tions A half-century o f historical research, by Catholic scholars as well as
dimension'. H e was i n f u r i a t e d w h e n Schillebeeckx began w i t h eschatol-
others, needed to be incorporated. C h r i s t o l o g y c o u l d b e g i n , n o t f r o m the
ogy (For the 10 years r e m a i n i n g to K r e l i n g he lived i n increasing isolation
d o c t r i n e o f the Incarnation, as Thomas Aquinas does, b u t f r o m t h e N e w
t h e o l o g i a n , Schillebeeckx recalled,
of the centenary o f the C o u n c i l spurred Karl
Generis,
i n a small parish - sidelined; one s h o u l d n o t forget the pain suffered by his
Testament narratives, the story o f h o w the m a n Jesus is discovered as Lord,
generation.)
scrutinized i n the light o f the best m o d e r n c r i t i c a l exegesis.
Before Vatican I I , then, Schillebeeckx had b r o k e n w i t h neoscholastic
As he made clear at the outset, Schillebeeckx sought to reconstruct
theology T h e n , i n 1965, another shift occur red w h e n he discovered h e r m e n -
C h r i s t o l o g y b e g i n n i n g w i t h the apparently diverse Christologies to be
eutics "This changed the way I d i d t h e o l o g y ' A principle often enunciated by
f o u n d i n the three synoptic gospels, according to the exegetes b y whose
Thomas Aquinas - ' o m n i a quae r e c i p i u n t u r recepta sunt secundum m o d u m
w o r k he was most attracted H e t o o k M a r k as the first gospel, already a con-
recipientis' (everything that is received is received according to the mode o f
troversial decision i n the eyes of most traditional Catholic theologians, but
the one w h o receives) — legitimized taking account always o f the social
h e l p i n g to substantiate the claim that a version of the story of Jesus existed
and historical conditions under w h i c h any knowledge takes place
Neo-
w i t h no account o f his b i r t h and infancy, and n o account o f his resurrection
thomistic theology was never related properly or sufficiently to experience:
either ( M a r k being assumed to conclude w i t h the w o m e n leaving the empty
60
E D W A R D
S C H I I I
E B E E C K X
E D W A R D
t o m b ) Schillebeeckx accepted the existence of the so-called ' Q ' d o c u m e n t : the hypothetical source o f the material shared by M a t t h e w and L u k e and absent i n M a r k
1 1
H e takes the ' Q ' material as the interweaving b y M a t t h e w
and L u k e i n t o their narratives o f a text that was o r i g i n a l l y the creed o f one o f the first C h r i s t i a n c o m m u n i t i e s (Jesus 4 1 0 - 1 2 ) T h i s creed says n o t h i n g about the suffering, death and resurrection o f Christ. H e was even attracted b y the t h o u g h t that we can detect developments w i t h i n the history o f this supposed Q - c o m m u n i t y , w i t h its distinctive ' C h r i s t o l o g y ' existing w i t h o u t any interest i n the Incarnation, Passion or Resurrection. T h a t he always planned to move f r o m the supposedly diverse C h r i s t o l o gies i n the first three gospels to the Christologies developed i n the f o u r t h gospel, i n the letters o f the apostle Paul, and i n the rest o f the N e w Testament, was always clear. This is, o f course, w h a t he d i d i n the second v o l u m e , another masterly engagement w i t h a vast amount o f secondary literature. B y then, however, so m u c h anxiety had been raised that he responded w i t h the Interim Report,
explaining and to some extent m o d i f y i n g the claims that
seemed so contentious
1 2
Obviously, c o m i n g late i n the day and largely self taught, Schillebeeckx was b o u n d to make mistakes. H e always goes for the most e x c i t i n g theory.
61
I by a critical study o f t h e N e w Testament texts and then s u b m i t t e d to reinterpretation This k i n d o f project is at least as o l d as nineteenth-century liberal Protestant exegetes. R u d o l f Bultmann's effort t o 'demythologize' t h e N e w Testament w i t h the aid o f Heidegger's existential categories seems t o engage Schillebeeckx's interest m o r e
H e simply reverses Bultmann's
strategy
Whereas B u l t m a n n maintained that hardly a n y t h i n g c o u l d be k n o w n about Jesus as a historical figure, w i t h the result that the w h o l e Christian p h e n o m enon is to be f o u n d i n the kerygma, i n the proclamation o f the Christ o f faith ('Jesus rose i n t o the kerygma', as B u l t m a n n p u t i t ) , Schillebeeckx asserts that the N e w Testament, properly studied, w i t h the tools o f m o d e r n criticalhistorical research, delivers substantial, verifiable i n f o r m a t i o n about Jesus of Nazareth
Indeed, this history 'can then show us w h a t exactly i t was that
very early C h r i s t i a n i t y understood b y the a f f i r m a t i o n : h e is the C h r i s t , the son o f man, the Son o f G o d , the L o r d ' (pp, 437, 440; cf pp. 71 and 515). This quasi-archaeological
excavation o f the synoptic gospels lays bare
five levels. 1
O n the other hand, as an experienced professor o f systematic theology,
jesus's o w n experience of G o d and of his mission -Jesus's ' A b b a experience': h i g h l i g h t i n g these references takes us to the historical Jesus, i n his
he came t o the results of biblical scholarship w i t h m u c h greater awareness o f the implications f o i C h r i s t i a n d o c t r i n e than biblical scholars c o m m o n l y
SCH11LEBEECKX
historically unique w a y of addressing G o d as ' A b b a ' 2
display
The experience o f Peter and the Twelve: some weeks or m o n t h s after Jesus's death, Peter had an experience o f being f o r g i v e n for his faithless-
A t one level, the Jesus b o o k is a vast c o m p e n d i u m o f the most recent biblical research
ness, gathered the disciples, i n a setting o f doubt and debate, recalled
T h e aim, however, is t o reconstruct the history o f the
w i t h t h e m the life and ' A b b a ' experience of Jesus, then ' T h e y all of a
development o f the N e w Testament literature, b e g i n n i n g w i t h the synoptic
sudden " s a w " i t ' (391) - Jesus crucified, has been definitively vindicated
gospels, so as t o reveal h o w faith i n Jesus emerged: ' W i t h the aid of Form¬ geschichte [the study o f the h i s t o r i c i t y o f biblical w r i t i n g s by studying their
by G o d and is alive w i t h his Father. 3
literary f o r m ] our a i m is, a m o n g other things, to penetrate t o the earliest layer of the pre-canonical tradition, i n order thus to open the way to Jesus o f
The Q - c o m m u n i t y tradition: f a i t h that Jesus was the expected latterday prophet and messianic judge w h o was 'exalted' to G o d
4
Nazareth' (744)
The early Palestinian Christians: f o l l o w i n g Jewish custom, they started a practice o f venerating the t o m b o f Jesus at Jerusalem, w h i c h gave rise to
The assumption is that the text as we have i t can be pressed to disclose the
the story o f w o m e n f i n d i n g the 'empty t o m b ' ' o n the t h i r d day'; 'an
elements o u t o f w h i c h i t was created. Schillebeeckx b u r r o w s i n t o w h a t
aetiological cult-legend, i n t e n d e d to shed light o n the (at least) annual
he calls the 'incubatory history' o f the texts, w i t h methods analogous to
visit o f the Jerusalem church t o the t o m b i n order t o h o n o r the risen
those o f an art restorer w h o strips off one level t o exhibit an u n d e r l y i n g
[exalted] O n e ' (336); and f r o m this practice, i n the 'first f e w genera-
sketch I f Christianity is neither to become 'an historical relic' n o r to appeal
tions', the language o f a b o d i l y resurrection f r o m the dead began to take
to 'supernatural hocus-pocus', its message must be reconstructed historically
precedence over the language o f 'exaltation' to the r i g h t h a n d o f the Father (396).
1 1
K n o w n as Q since t h e 1890s ( G e r m a n Quelle - source); see ] K l o p p e n b o r g
tion of Q ( P h i l a d e l p h i a , P A : Fortress 1 9 8 7 ) . 1 2
Interim
Report on the Books Jesus'and
'Christ'
( L o n d o n : S C M Press 1980)
The Forma-
5
F r o m a 'theology o f Jesus' to a ' C h r i s t o l o g y ' : from interpretations of the meaning o f Jesus concerned n o t w i t h w h o or w h a t Jesus was b u t w i t h w h a t he was meant to do, thus 'first-order' ' f u n c t i o n a l ' descriptions, t o
62
E D W A R D
E D W A R D
S C E I I I I E B E E C K X
the 'second-order' ' o n t o l o g i c a l ' claims about t h e i d e n t i t y o f Jesus, already there i n Paul and John
63
S C H I L L E B E E C K X
existence, his very b e i n g , solely t o the H o l y Spirit I n due course this Christological reflection assumed a historical f o r m - 'one that is indeed concrete, albeit n o t e m p i r i c a l l y ascertainable, b u t to be approached and
The claim, then, p u t t i n g i t t o o simply, is that, by re-creating t h e history o f
evaluated o n l y w i t h i n a context o f faith - i n a V i r g i n B i r t h ' (Jesus 555-6). I n
h o w faith i n Jesus o f Nazareth arose, i t becomes possible t o arouse faith i n
other words, so i t seemed to most readers, w h a t has been taken as an account
h i m i n people n o t h i t h e r t o C h r i s t i a n believers, w h o w o u l d n o t f i n d ready
o f something that happened - the c o n c e p t i o n and b i r t h o f Jesus, his mother
access t o h i m t h r o u g h t h e doctrines o f the C h u r c h - Incarnation, Passion,
remaining a v i r g i n - is actually a representation as a piece o f history of the
Resurrection, and so o n
p r i o r and independent belief i n Jesus's unique o r i g i n i n t h e H o l y Spirit.
Few Christians, certainly n o Catholics before Vatican I I , ever depended
T h e n again, w h a t d i d the disciples 'see', w h e n they encountered the risen
o n doctrines apart f r o m a great deal oi experience. N o d o u b t theologians, and
L o r d Jesus? A c c o r d i n g t o Schillebeeckx, i t seems, i n the literal sense o f vision
even o r d i n a r y Catholics, shied away f r o m the w o r d , i t was t o o m u c h associ-
they saw n o t h i n g - n o t h i n g happened that m i g h t have been
ated w i t h m o d e r n i s m . Yet, i n practice, i n t h e liturgy, i n personal asceticism
physically, o r photographed They simply 'saw', o n reflection together, that
experienced
(regular confession, acts o f penance, continence i n marriage, and so o n ) , i n
Jesus is 'the l i v i n g O n e ' . H i s resurrection f r o m the dead should n o t be
acquaintance w i t h m e n and especially w o m e n l i v i n g under vows o f pover ty,
understood 'objectively', as an e m p i r i c a l l y verifiable, historical event - that
chastity and obedience (monks, nuns, sisters), a n d m u c h else, 'cradle'
is w h a t fundamentalists believe O n the other hand, the resurrection o f Jesus
Catholics were b o r n and b r o u g h t up i n a w h o l e culture, e m p i r i c a l l y h a b i t u -
should n o t be understood as something that t o o k place entirely i n t h e heads
ating t h e m t o 'the C h r i s t i a n t h i n g ' (as G . K Chesterton called it) - such that
o f his followers, as a subjective renewal o f their faith - as B u l t m a n n and
there was plenty of 'experience', a r i c h l y textured background, c a r r y i n g and
others h o l d , so Schillebeeckx says H e wants a middle path H e locates the
c o m p l e t i n g the doctrines
o r i g i n a l Easter experience i n a conversion process (subjective), i n w h i c h the
I n effect, the Christ w h o m most
Catholics
encountered principally at Mass, w i t h all that penumbra o f religious e x p e r i ence, Schillebeeckx was suggesting, c o u l d n o w also be f o u n d i n r e c o n structing and appropriating the history o f the i n i t i a l encounter w i t h the Jesus of the N e w Testament.
disciples 'saw', o r came t o believe, that Jesus was alive w i t h G o d (objective) M o s t Christians, i f t h e y believe i n the resurrection o f Jesus f r o m t h e dead at all, literally understood, suppose that this b e l i e f is based o n the evidence o f the tomb's b e i n g f o u n d empty and o f the physical encounters w i t h Jesus after his death. Schillebeeckx argues, however, that t h e language o f ' r e s u r rection', the concept o f 'being raised f r o m t h e dead', far f r o m b e i n g the o r i g i n a l interpretation o f what happened, is second order, supplementary,
T h e Easter Experience
and the p r o d u c t of later reflection O r i g i n a l l y , the C h r i s t i a n faith was, n o t Obviously, the very idea o f r e t h i n k i n g C h r i s t o l o g y o n the basis o f 'scientific'
that Jesus was raised f r o m the dead, b u t that he was 'exalted i n t o heaven',
h i s t o r i c o - c r i t i c a l exegesis o f Scripture rather than i n terms o f t h e dogmas
'sitting at t h e r i g h t hand o f t h e Father' -
o f the C h u r c h was always g o i n g to shock most Catholic
theologians,
metaphorical language I n fact, t h e figurative language that we are n o doubt
obviously analogical and
neoscholastic or otherwise - let alone pastors charged w i t h p r o t e c t i n g the
i n c l i n e d to regard as secondary and o p t i o n a l (exaltation) is, o n the contrary,
beliefs o f 'the simple faithful'. F o r one t h i n g , there was always the danger o f
w h a t is basic and original.
genetic fallacy: discovering its origins does n o t guarantee g e t t i n g nearer the
Thus, t h e 'Easter experience', historically, was always independent of the
t r u t h o f a claim O n the other hand, Schillebeeckx t o o k risks, sometimes
' t r a d i t i o n ' o f t h e appearance stories, and equally so of t h e ' t r a d i t i o n ' of the
w i t h a h a n d f u l of extremely sensitive topics, w h i c h distracted readers f r o m
e m p t y t o m b (397) T h e p r o b l e m here, w i t h h o w the empty t o m b stories
learning f r o m the immense b i b l i o g r a p h y digested f o r t h e m b y his o m n i v -
g r e w up, is that the evidence f o r there being veneration o f anybody's tomb
orous reading.
at the t i m e is scanty — never m i n d the leap f r o m v i s i t i n g Jesus's t o m b to
O n e p r o b l e m , of course, is that o f the virginal c o n c e p t i o n o f Jesus As a
c l a i m i n g i t was empty ' T h e vital context', namely f o r t h e story i n M a r k of
result o f the 'Easter experience', reflection eventually shifted to Jesus's
the women's visit to t h e t o m b , 'is a t o m b w h e r e a l i t u r g i c a l service is con-
baptism by J o h n and thus to the emergence and actual c o n s t i t u t i o n of his
d u c t e d ' - w h i c h 'is something g r o u n d e d deep i n h u m a n nature' (336) I n
being man - i n other words, t o the conclusion that Jesus owes his h u m a n
the extensive, and valuable, bibliography to t h e analysis o f the e m p t y tomb
64
E D W A R D
S C H I I I E B E E C K X
E D W A R D
65
S C H I I 1 E B E E C K X
stories there is really n o t h i n g bearing this o u t except a reference to five
For Schillebeeckx, then, the p o i n t is that biblical and ecclesiastical expres-
pages i n J o a c h i m Jeremias's b o o k o n popular pilgrimages to sacred tombs i n
sions of faith are never purely and simply articulations o f supposedly ' i m -
the early C h r i s t i a n e n v i r o n m e n t .
mediate religious experiences', such as experiences of Jesus that his disciples
1 3
The reference to 'the t h i r d day' - as i t were the Sunday three days after
may be said to have had. These expressions are always already theory-laden
G o o d Friday - says n o t h i n g about the date o n w h i c h Jesus was raised f r o m
H e allows that this needed m u c h m o r e discussion, i n the t w o books on
the dead - r ather, i t is code for the definitive, eschatological saving action o f
Jesus I t needs m u c h m o r e than he takes space to discuss i n Interim
G o d as regards the crucified Jesus (532). O n the t h i r d day Joseph releases
However, i t is enough to insist that even expressions o f faith are never
his brothers f r o m prison (Gen
Report
42:18); G o d makes a covenant w i t h his
straight presentations o f religious experience - they necessarily i n c l u d e an
people (Exod. 19:11, 16); G o d gives life t o his people and raises t h e m up
element o f t h e o r y Experience is always already interpretative. To deny this,
(Hos 6 : 2 - 3 ) ; and so on. That 'the t h i r d day' has all this previous biblical
he suggests, is to fall i n t o a f o r m o f n e o - e m p i r i c i s m - and i t is surely clear
significance is, of course, a valuable insight. W h y this insight makes i t r e d u n -
that w h a t he means is that some o f his critics at any rate rely o n a 'naive con-
dant to t h i n k that Jesus actually rose o n the t h i r d day as Schillebeeckx seems
fidence i n so-called direct experiences'.
14
to suggest, rather than m a k i n g w h a t really happened that m o r e deeply significant, is the k i n d o f question that goes beyond the parameters o f biblical criticism
Conclusion
The fears o f those i n c l u d i n g f e l l o w D o m i n i c a n s w h o delated h i m to the Congregation for the D o c t r i n e o f the Faith are, o f course, that Schille-
Totally c o m m i t t e d to renewal o f the C h u r c h , Schillebeeckx never played
beeckx's emphasis o n 'experience' undermines belief i n the teaching office
d o w n the many crises and conflicts at the C o u n c i l , as we see i n the accounts
o f the C h u r c h as the n o r m o f t r u t h . I n Interim Report - essentially his reply
he w r o t e .
to critics o f the first t w o volumes o n Christology - Schillebeeckx insists that
ship between
he should n o t be dismissed as a 'neo-liberal'. H e refuses to concede that he
pastoral constitution o n the C h u r c h i n the M o d e r n W o r l d , Gaudiutn et Spes,
devalues the t r a d i t i o n o f the C h r i s t i a n c o m m u n i t y H e insists that he never
opened the way (he expected) to b r i n g Catholicism i n t o f r u i t f u l interaction
offered m o r e than prolegomena to a future C h r i s t o l o g y - his project should
w i t h secular culture T h e C o u n c i l was a 'compromise', he recognized
therefore n o t be attacked f o r w h a t i t is not. H e discusses many other issues,
l i f t e d the shadow of Humani
i n w h a t is i n some ways his most interesting c o n t r i b u t i o n to theological
i n w h i c h Catholic theologians w o r k e d since the modernist crisis Indeed, ' i t
methodology. F r o m the p o i n t o f v i e w o f those concerned w i t h his n o t i o n
was the theology of theologians w h o had been condemned, removed from
o f ' e x p e r i e n c e ' he takes us back to the literature referenced i n the
teaching posts, sent i n t o exile, that t r i u m p h e d at the C o u n c i l '
b o o k , t h o u g h h i g h l i g h t i n g the w o r k o f K a r l Popper,
TS.
Christ
K u h n , Imre
Lakatos, Paul Feyerabend and the Erlangen School (Paul Lorenzen).
The
1 5
O n the w h o l e , he rejoiced i n w h a t he saw as the new relationC h u r c h and w o r l d , w h i c h the C o u n c i l established.
The
It
Generis and ended the climate o f i n t i m i d a t i o n
1 6
- however,
as he noted, the neoscholastics were defeated only temporarily, and there w o u l d be a r e t u r n o f the repressed, such that a k i n d o f restoration was
p o i n t he wants to make is that his c o n c e p t i o n of the interrelationship o f the
unavoidable
concepts o f revelation, experience and i n t e r p r e t a t i o n w o u l d indeed be mis-
w h i l e o n some extremely i m p o r t a n t issues the anti-modernist ultramon¬
leading i f w e supposed that every experience is accompanied by conceptual
tanist m i n o r i t y were o u t v o t e d , the c o n f l i c t i n g versions o f Catholicism o n
or metaphorical articulations. Since Kant, and particularly i n the p h i l o s o -
show o n the f l o o r of the C o u n c i l reflect the division w i t h i n the C h u r c h
phers he mentions, i t has been recognized that theory or m o d e l has a certain
t h e n - and prefigure the division that there is still.
1 7
W i t h o u t m u c h need o f hindsight, we do better to say that,
p r i m a c y over experience, i n the sense that there can be n o experience w i t h o u t at least an i m p l i c i t theory. O n the other hand, theories cannot be derived f r o m experiences straight off, as i f b y i n d u c t i o n ; they are the product 1 4
o f creative initiative o n our part.
1 5
Interim
Report:
Vatican IT The
18. Struggle of Minds
The Real Achievement J o a c h i m Jeremias, Heiligengraber 1958)
1 3
in Jcsu
Umwelt
(Gottingen: Vandenhoeck
and
Ruprecht
(Dublin: M H
G i l l 1963) a n d Vatican
II
Theologian:
15.
1 6
I Am a Happy
1 7
D a n i e l Speed T h o m p s o n ,
Authority
and Other Essays
( L o n d o n : Sheed a n d W a r d 1967)
in the Catholic
Church
The
Language
of Dissent/
Edward
Schillebeeckx
on the
Crisis
( N o t r e D a m e . I N : U n i v e r s i t y o f N o t r e D a m e Press 2 0 0 3 )
of
66
E D W A R D
S C H I L I
E B E E C K X
Chapter Five
The debate i n philosophy, analytic and hermeneutic, has of course moved o n i n the past 25 years Perhaps Schillebeeckx does n o t explain himself perfectly, or even all that skilfully, philosophically T h e p o s i t i o n that he wants to
H E N R I DE LUBAC
occupy, i n theological epistemology, namely, somewhere between naive e m p i r i c i s m and subjectivism, is anyway controversial. W h a t remains impressive, i n his generation o f Catholic theologians, is his readiness to engage w i t h the central philosophical issue o f the relationship between experience and interpretation Moreover, he has not had many successors as yet i n the field o f C a t h o l i c theology w h o dare, or are even competent, to r e w o r k the doctrines o f the faith as defined b y the early Councils and e x p o u n d e d i n the classical theology of the Fathers and the Scholastics, i n the l i g h t o f serious study of Scripture and related literature The g u l f between professors o f doct r i n e and biblical scholars is as w i d e as ever.
Thomas Aquinas was, o f course, a D o m i n i c a n friar A t t h e i r chapter i n Paris i n 1286, 12 years after his death, the D o m i n i c a n s decreed that every friar should p r o m o t e his teaching and i f anyone taught the contrary he was to be suspended ipso facto f r o m whatever office he h e l d u n t i l he t h o u g h t better. For all that, the reception of Aquinas w i t h i n his o w n O r d e r has a chequered history
1
T h e n , even w h e n they were all professing Thomists, D o m i n i c a n s
such as C h e n u , Congar and Schillebeeckx,
c o u l d , as w e have seen, clash
w i t h confreres like Garrigou-Lagrange, i n radically different and effectively incommensurable interpretations o f Aquinas even w i t h i n the confines of the D o m i n i c a n Order. W h e n we t u r n to such e m i n e n t Jesuit theologians as H e n r i de Lubac, K a r l Rahner, Bernard Lonergan and Hans U r s v o n Balthasar, however, i t turns out, according to their recollections, that, as far as their years o f mandat o r y Thomist philosophy were concerned, they were taught what they came to recognize as 'Suarezianism'
2
I n any case, de Lubac's early years as a Jesuit were so disrupted by the Great War that he seems to have been left largely to get o n w i t h his o w n reading, undisturbed b y lecture courses. H i s superiors seem n o t to have regarded h i m as a future professor, either o f philosophy o r of t h e o l o g y H e often expresses gratitude to scholars o f the previous generation, nearly all of w h o m were his fellow Jesuits; but effectively he was self-taught.
1
N c w n u n . o n his w a y t o R o m e i n a u t u m n 1846, as y e t u n d e c i d e d w h i c h r e l i g i o u s order i f
any he s h o u l d j o i n
was s h o c k e d t o l e a r n o f the D o m i n i c a n s i n Florence m a n u f a c t u r i n g
s c e n t e d w a t e r , possessing a cellar o f g o o d w i n e s , a n d w i t h n o interest i n T h o m a s A q u i n a s , w h i c h d e c i d e d h i m against t h e m
Tlie Letters
( L o n d o n : T h o m a s N e l s o n a n d Sons 1 9 6 1 ) : 2 6 0 2
and Diaries 263
See chapter 8 f o r Balthasar's a c c o u n t o f Suarezianism
of John
Henry
Newman,
vol X I
68
H E N R I
D E
H E N R I
I U B A C
D E
69
I U B A C
at
Pier re Teilhard de C h a r d i n Mainly, however, he had already begun w o r k i n g
Cambrai, i n north-east France. I h e family returned i n 1898 to the Lyons
his way t h r o u g h the Greek and L a t i n patrologies and the medieval Scholas-
district H i s father, a banker, o r i g i n a l l y f r o m Ardèche (where, i n the local
tics, gathering the quotations o u t of w h i c h he w o u l d weave his books. As his
dialect, Vubac means the shady side o f a m o u n t a i n ) , admired the Catholic
younger colleague and friend Hans U r s v o n Balthasar w o u l d note, de Lubac
social renewal project inspired by A l b e r t de M u n
H i s maternal g r a n d -
preferred 'to let a voice f r o m the great ecclesial tradition express w h a t he
parents were old-fashioned royalists, adhering to the elder b r a n c h o f the
intends rather than raising his o w n v o i c e ' - y e t , unmistakably, his views 'can
B o u r b o n dynasty Schooled by Jesuits i n Lyons, H e n r i studied l a w f o r a year,
be easily discerned i n the w e b o f quotations, especially w h e n one pays close
before entering the Lyons province of the Society o f Jesus, then i n exile at
attention to the critiques and corrections o f the passages c i t e d ' .
St Leonards o n the south coast o f England. H i s noviciate was i n t e r r u p t e d
o f course, that de Lubac's views are easily missed by hasty readers, impatient
w h e n he was drafted i n 1914, i n t o the French a r m y H e saw action i n
to locate a position to challenge or to adopt - he is too elusive for that; yet, as
Flanders, receiving the serious head w o u n d at Les Eparges, i n 1916, w h i c h
one becomes accustomed to the procedure o f m u l t i p l y i n g references, de
afflicted h i m f o r the rest o f his life
Tubac's theological options soon reveal themselves..
H e n r i Joseph Sonier d e
3
Lubac was b o r n o n 20 February 1896, 4
5
9
10
This means,
D e m o b i l i z e d , he r e t u r n e d to the Jesuits, at Canterbury, then o n Jersey
I n a way de Lubac re-created a w h o l e p r e - m o d e r n Catholic sensibility
Years later, he reported that 'a certain Suârezian and M o l i n i s t o r t h o d o x y '
w h i c h he w a n t e d to inhabit. M u c h later, about 1960, l o o k i n g back o n the
was required o f the professors, claiming that o n Jersey t w o were 'savage
results of his decades o f research i n patristic and medieval-scholastic t h e o l o -
Suârezians' - whereas by 1950, ironically, 'against the abusive dominance o f a
gies, de Lubac w o u l d say that, for h i m , the 'great c e n t u r y ' of the M i d d l e
" T h o m i s t " school that was t h e n i n p o w e r ' , there were Jesuits seeking
Ages began around the year 1100, w i t h 'the Bayeux tapestry, the murals
freedom to ' f o l l o w the Suârezian interpretation o f Saint L h o m a s ' . Clearly,
at Saint-Savin, the sculptures at Toulouse and Moissac, the Heavenly Jeru-
he distances himself f r o m both. O n his o w n , he studied Thomas Aquinas,
salem at San Pietro al M o n t e (Civate), the basilicas o f C l u n y and Vézelay,
i n the light (however) o f Etienne Gilson's 'fundamental b o o k ' , w h i c h , he
the first mosaics at San M a r c o ' .
notes, again w i t h some irony, was ' i n the bookcase o f l i g h t reading that was
(c
generously u n l o c k e d for us d u r i n g holidays', together w i t h Rousselot's thesis
Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153), 'the last o f the Fathers
at the Sorbonne o n Aquinas's intellectualism Colleagues m o c k e d h i m as a
great m o d e r n s ' .
' T h o m i s t ' (as lus colleagues laughed at George Tyrrell). As regards his p h i l o -
Knowledge of Easter n as w e l l as o f Western patristic literature I n referring
sophical culture, de Lubac
8
to h i m , de Lubac is r e m i n d i n g us that the Greek fathers remained i n the
E v i d e n t l y unaffected by lecture courses, he o w e d a great deal to discussions
m e m o r y o f the L a t i n C h u r c h w e l l i n t o the t w e l f t h century R u p e r t, o n the
w i t h contemporaries, some of w h o m were to be friends f o r life, i n c l u d i n g
other hand, is best remembered f o r supposedly h o l d i n g the d o c t r i n e later
6
7
read M a u r i c e B l o n d e l , w i t h
enthusiasm.
12
T h e n o b i l i a r y p a r t i c l e , c o r r e c t l y used o n l y w i t h t h e prénom
or i n i t i a l , but. even i n French
This was the age o f R u p e r t o f Deutz , the first of the
W h a t is remarkable about W i l l i a m , o f course, is his w i d e
k n o w n as i m p a n a t i o n 3
1 1
1075-1129/1130), o f W i l l i a m o f S t - T h i e r r y (1075/80-1148), and o f
1 3
H e also w r o t e a commentary o n the Song o f Songs,
i n w h i c h he interprets the beloved as the V i r g i n Mary, and was a m o n g the
w e find h i m o f t e n r e f e r r e d t o as de L u b a c t h e standard p r a c t i c e i n E n g l i s h 4
F o r b i o g r a p h i c a l details see Jean-Pierre W a g n e r Henri de Lubac (Paris: C e r f 2001) a n d H e n r i
de Lubac, At the Service of the Church 5
(San Francisco: Ignatius Press 1993)
his selective m e m o i r s .
A l b e r t de M u n ( 1 8 4 1 - 1 9 1 4 ) , leader o f t h e l i b e r a l C a t h o l i c s i n F r a n c e f o u n d e d C a t h o l i c to Henri
Letters of Etienne
7
I b i d : 7 - 8 ; t h e second 1922 e d i t i o n o f Le Thomisme,
'less d e p e n d e n t o n m o d e r n T h o m i s t s
i t c o n t a i n e d a m o r e p e n e t r a t i n g analysis o f t h e actual t e x t o f Saint T h o m a s ' ;
LTinteHectuahsme
b y t h e F r e n c h Jesuit P i e r r e R o u s s e l o t .
killed
i n a c t i o n at Les Eparges i n 1915 aged 36 s
such r i g o r o u s censorship that l i t t l e appeared, b u t his w o r k has been i m m e n s e l y p o p u l a r p o s t h u m o u s l y As a Jesuit student at Hastings he p a r t i c i p a t e d i n t h e 'discovery' o f P i l t d o w n M a n . 1 0
H a n s U r s v o n Balthasar
Tlie
Theology
of Henri
de Lubac:
An
Overview
(San
Francisco:
I g n a t i u s Press 1 9 9 1 ) : 2 6 - 7
M a u r i c e B l o n d e l ( 1 8 6 1 - 1 9 4 9 ) , lay C a t h o l i c p h i l o s o p h e r , h i g h l i g h t e d t h e p r e ^ f l g c t i v e
desire o f h u m a n beings f o r v i s i o n o f G o d : L'Action:
received several citations f o r v a l o u r H e was professor o f g e o l o g y i n Paris
V i k i n g ( W e n n e r - G r e n ) F o u n d a t i o n F r o m 1925 he was r e q u i r e d t o s u b m i t religious w r i t i n g s t o
de Lubac (San Francisco: I g n a t i u s Press 1 9 8 8 ) : 188..
6
de saint Thomas (1908. E n g l i s h t r a n s l a t i o n 1935)
M a r i e - J o s e p h Pierre T e i l h a r d de C h a r d i n ( 1 8 8 1 - 1 9 5 5 ) m o b i l i z e d i n D e c e m b e r 1914 as a
stretcher-bearer,
1 9 2 0 - 5 , m o s d y i n C h i n a 1 9 2 3 - 4 6 s t u d y i n g early h u m a n remains i n N e w Y o r k 1 9 5 1 - 5 w i t h t h e
w o r k e r s circles a n d was a p r o l i f i c w r i t e r Gilson
11
Essai d'une critique de la vie et d'une science de
1 1
Exégèse
médiévale
les quatre sens de l'Ecriture,
( I V ) (Paris: A u b i e r 1 9 5 9 , 1 9 6 1 . 1964)
C o l l e c t i o n T h é o l o g i e 4 1 ( I a n d I I ) , 4 2 ( I I I 0 50
H e r e 11:232
la pratique ( 1 8 9 3 ) , translated b y O l i v a B l a n c he tte ( N o t r e D a m e , I N : U n i v e r s i t y o f N o t r e D a m e
1 2
Ibid
Press 1984)
n
T h e B o d y o f C h r i s t is ' i m p a n a t e d ' . ' i m - b r e a d e d , so t o speak, at t h e e u c h a r i s t i e consecra-
A d e v o u t C a t h o l i c , he l i v e d f o r years i n t e r r o r o f h a v i n g his w o r k p l a c e d o n t h e
I n d e x o f P r o h i b i t e d B o o k s , a n d was harassed especially b y t h e D o m i n i c a n s
111:426-7
t i o n , o n analogy w i t h t h e W o r d ' s b e c o m i n g i n c a r n a t e
'enfleshed'
70
H E N R I
D E
H E N R I
I U B A C
earliest to do so W h a t n o d o u b t attracted de Lubac is that R u p e r t , o n
Catholicism
in 1950.
17
D E
71
L U B A C
Many, i n c l u d i n g Congar, Balthasar, W o j t y l a and
several occasions under suspicion by ecclesiastical authorities, is one o f the
Ratzinger, regarded i t as the key b o o k o f t w e n t i e t h - c e n t u r y C a t h o l i c t h e o l -
many misunderstood characters i n the history o f theology w h o m he seems
ogy, the one indispensable text. Against the b a c k g r o u n d of the liberal-
to have made a deliberate choice to highlight. Against the 'devastating c o n -
capitalist and totalitarian ideologies o f the 1930s, de Lubac sought to show
tractions o f [ m o d e r n C a t h o l i c ] t h e o l o g y ' , as Balthasar noted, de Lubac
that, i n Catholic Christianity, the claims o f person and o f society are equally
chose to w r i t e , n o t about Bonaventure, Nicholas o f Cusa, Pascal, Möhler,
respected Very m u c h a tract for those times, p r i m a r i l y directed against the
N e w m a n , and so o n , w h o m one w o u l d have regarded as his 'allies' i n the
overly individualistic and introspective spirituality o f h i s y o u t h , as he saw i t ,
history of C a t h o l i c theology; b u t o n 'other representatives o f universal
the b o o k is nevertheless as relevant a therapy f o r those w h o m i g h t n o w be
t h o u g h t , namely, the great a m o n g the vanquished w h o have fallen because
i n c l i n e d to over-emphasize the c o m m u n a l structure of Catholic p i e t y I n a
of the machinations o f smaller minds or o f a n a r r o w C a t h o l i c i s m that is
substantial appendix, de Lubac offers 55 extracts, m a i n l y f r o m patristic and
politically rather than spiritually m i n d e d ' , f r o m O r i g e n to Leilhard de
medieval sources, often neglected and little k n o w n , but i n c l u d i n g N e w m a n ,
Chardin
I t was also, as w e shall see, i m p o r t a n t that R u p e r t c o n t r i b u t e d to
F r i e d r i c h v o n H u g e l , and Teilhard de C h a r d i n , taking us f r o m the Christian
the t r a d i t i o n o f c o m m e n t i n g o n the Song o f Songs. Finally, i n this little
anthropology o f G r e g o r y o f Nyssa to a vision o f the Cosmic Tree m i s a t t r i b -
cameo, de Lubac signals that the 'great century', f o r h i m , i n Western C h r i s -
uted to John C h r y s o s t o m Here, already, de Lubac notes that, u n t i l late i n
tianity, was n o t the t h i r t e e n t h , w i t h Thomas Aquinas, as most neoscholastic
the M i d d l e Ages, the expression 'corpus m y s t i c u m ' referred t o Christ's
theologians w o u l d have c l a i m e d .
eucharistic body, rather than to the b o d y o f C h r i s t i n the sense of the
1 4
15
C h u r c h . Already, m u c h m o r e contentiously, de Lubac, insisting that the w h o l e o f C a t h o l i c C h r i s t i a n dogma is a series o f paradoxes, declares that the greatest paradox of all is that, w h i l e the vision o f G o d enjoyed by the blessed
Key Books in Modern Catholicism
is a free gift, unanticipated, u n m e r i t e d , never owed to t h e m , yet t h e desire
I n 1929, after the Jesuits r e t u r n e d to France, de Lubac began l e c t u r i n g o n
f o r k is, naturally and constitutively i n every h u m a n soul.
fundamental theology at the Theology Faculty o f Lyons, the required d o c -
These t w o themes are spelled o u t i n the n e x t t w o books D e Lubac's life
torate having been conferred by the Gregorian U n i v e r s i t y i n R o m e at the
was, o f course, i n t e r r u p t e d by the G e r m a n occupation o f France A f t e r the
behest of the Father General o f the Society o f Jesus, w i t h o u t de Lubac's
capitulation, many Catholics were content w i t h the V i c h y government: i t
setting f o o t there or ever s u b m i t t i n g a dissertation
For better or worse,
seemed the restoration o f the traditional Catholic France that the anti-
like many o f the e m i n e n t C a t h o l i c theologians o f his generation, de Lubac
clericalism o f the T h i r d R e p u b l i c (and its hated atheist and Jewish deputies)
was never subjected to the discipline o f doctoral research i n w h i c h their
had repressed. D e Lubac was one o f the m i n o r i t y w h o resisted, against the
Protestant contemporaries, especially i n Germany, began their careers
w i l l o f his Jesuit superiors i n R o m e .
H e never taught any of the m a i n theological courses to Jesuit students or
colleague and f r i e n d Yves de M o n t c h e u i l , arrested a m o n g the M a q u i s at
anyone else.
Vercors, was executed by the Gestapo at Grenoble i n A u g u s t 1 9 4 4 .
1 6
1 8
H e w e n t i n t o h i d i n g , b u t his Jesuit 19
Ready f o r p u b l i c a t i o n b y 1939, Corpus Mysticum : Essai sur I'Eucharistie et
T h e books that he w o v e out of fris reading, w h i c h he usually passed off as 'occasional', and p u t together at someone else's u r g i n g , soon began to
I'Eghse au Moyen Age, appeared i n 1944
appear. Three were to become major texts i n m o d e r n C a t h o l i c theology
retrieved the doctrine, p u t pithily, that 'the church makes the eucharist
This 'naive b o o k ' , as he called i t ,
The first, Catholicisme- Les Aspects sociaux du dogme, appeared i n 1938 t h o u g h
and the eucharist makes the c h u r c h ' Leafing t h r o u g h volumes o f Migne's
the outbreak o f the Second W o r l d W a r meant that i t reached the w i d e r readership o n l y i n the expanded e d i t i o n o f T 9 4 7 . I t appeared i n English as
1 7
O r i g i n a l l y p u b l i s h e d u n d e r t h e t i d e Catholicism
reissued i n 1988 as Catholicism:
Christ and the Common
( L o n d o n : L o n g m a n G r e e n 1950) i t was Destiny
of Man (San Francisco: Ignatius
Press) 1 4
1 5
Balthasar, The Theology of Henri
au douzième 1 6
de Lubac:
30-1
F o r that m a t t e r C h e n u s best w o r k , s o m e m i g h t say is t o b e found i n his b o o k La siècle (Paris: V r i n
At the Service oj the Church:
1957) 143
1 8
Théologie
H e n r i de L u b a c
Christian
Resistance
to Anti-Semitism
Memoirs
from 1940-1944
(San F r a n -
cisco: I g n a t i u s Press 1990) 1 9
F o r his m e m o i r o f his colleague see H e n r i de L u b a c .
I g n a t i u s Press 1987).
Three Jesuits
Speak (San
Francisco:
72
H E N R I
Patrologia Latina,
D E
I U B A C
H E N R I
he h i t o n the phrase 'corpus m y s t i c u m ' i n the w o r k o f
Florus o f Lyons ( w h o d i e d a r o u n d 860)
2 0
This started h i m o f f o n the trail.
I n m o d e r n times, and especially since Pope Pius X I I ' s encyclical
D E
73
I U B A C
to the standard neoscholastic t h e o l o g y o f grace and nature. The b o o k is peppered w i t h barely coded insults directed at august T h o m i s t c o m m e n t a -
Mystici
tors past and present H o w e v e r , i t was n o t o n l y that, according to de Lubac,
Corporis Christi (1943), the C h u r c h was referred to, i n seminary courses, p r i -
they m o r e or less all m i s i n t e r p r e t e d Aquinas - a shocking e n o u g h c o n -
m a r i l y as the 'mystical B o d y ' o f Christ
t e n t i o n , o f course - they d i d so, he claimed, because o f their ignorance o f
As he pursued his research i n
Torrell,J-P,33 Tracy, David, 111 n Tromp, Sebastian, 37, 55 Tubingen School, 7n, 15, 20, 53, 209 Tymieniecka, Anna Tl, 167 Tyranowski,Jan, 165 Tyrrell, George, 5-7, 56, 68, 93 ultramontanism, 6, 55,173, 206 UtUnum Sint, 171-5,207 Vatican I , 117, 158,207n, 208 Vico,GB,190n Vigilius, 222n Wais, K , 164 Weigel, George, 176,187 William o f St-Thierry, 69 Williams, A . N , 1 8 n Williams, G H , 163n, 168 Wilmsen,A., 184 Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 13, 92-3, 102, 108n, 128,169,191 Wojtyla, Karol, 71, 163-82 on Aquinas, 168-70 on the body, 180-1 on contraception, 219-21 on Maritain, 168 and phenomenology, 166-8 and Poltawska, 219 and Tyranowski, 165 see also John Paul I I Wolff, Christian, 30, 11 7 Wolffianism, 23, 30-1,127 women, 102, 200-1 Yannaras, C , 82 Zigliara, T.M , 9, 23